Team:UCL/Project/Biobricks
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Usually found in white-rot fungi species, its main function in nature is to participate in lignin-degrading processes by these organisms. However, it has also been found to <strong>play a role in azo dye degradation and decolourisation, by oxidative processes</strong>. This enzyme, like laccase, would be incorporated in the second step of the reaction to oxidise the products of the azo bond cleavage, in order to achieve greater detoxification. The sequence for the enzyme will be ordered and synthesised, including the BioBrick prefix and suffix. Again, it will function together with a promoter and a RBS. </p> | Usually found in white-rot fungi species, its main function in nature is to participate in lignin-degrading processes by these organisms. However, it has also been found to <strong>play a role in azo dye degradation and decolourisation, by oxidative processes</strong>. This enzyme, like laccase, would be incorporated in the second step of the reaction to oxidise the products of the azo bond cleavage, in order to achieve greater detoxification. The sequence for the enzyme will be ordered and synthesised, including the BioBrick prefix and suffix. Again, it will function together with a promoter and a RBS. </p> | ||
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- | <a name="BBa_K1336004"><span><em>Bacillus subtilis</em> dye-decolorizing peroxidase (BsDyP) (BBa_K1336004)</span></a></ | + | <a name="BBa_K1336004"><span><em>Bacillus subtilis</em> dye-decolorizing peroxidase (BsDyP) (BBa_K1336004)</span></a></h4> |
Found in <em>B. subtilis</em>, the physiological function of this newly discovered enzyme is still unclear, although it has <strong>shown effectiveness in degrading lignin and azo dyes</strong>, which makes it useful for us. It is not as effective as PpDyP for most compounds, but very efficient in degrading ABTS (2,2'-azino-bis(3-ethylbenzthiazoline-6-sulphonic acid)). The BioBrick will be constructed via PCR. </p> | Found in <em>B. subtilis</em>, the physiological function of this newly discovered enzyme is still unclear, although it has <strong>shown effectiveness in degrading lignin and azo dyes</strong>, which makes it useful for us. It is not as effective as PpDyP for most compounds, but very efficient in degrading ABTS (2,2'-azino-bis(3-ethylbenzthiazoline-6-sulphonic acid)). The BioBrick will be constructed via PCR. </p> | ||
Revision as of 16:40, 26 September 2014
BioBricks
We plan to create a complete synthetic azo dye decolourising device in E. coli which incorporates several different independent enzymes that act on azo dyes and their breakdown products. After evaluating their individual breakdown characteristics, we aim to investigate the potential synergistic action of these enzymes in a single synthetic E. coli device and design a bioprocess which could be used to upscale the method to an industrial context.
In an industrial setting, these enzymes would work sequentially in a bioreactor with preset dynamic conditions. First, azoreductase will cleave the azo-bond (N=N) by a double reduction using NADPH as a cofactor, producing a series of highly toxic aromatic amines. Then, these compounds will be oxidised by lignin peroxidase, laccase and bacterial peroxidases, completing decolourisation and decreasing toxicity levels, to the point that the final products of the process are less toxic than the intact dyes themselves. The complementary action of azoreductase, lignin peroxidase, laccase, and bacterial peroxidases will be studied in order to find out the best possible approach of sequential reaction, and this core degradation module will be extrapolated to other areas such as BioArt projects and work on algal-bacterial symbiosis, trying to set up the foundations for a synthetic ecology.