Team:ULB-Brussels/Project
From 2014.igem.org
(Ajout Wetlab intro image, dernier paragraphe avancé.) |
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Micro-organisms used to produce recombinant proteins in bioreactors are often seen as a homogeneous population. However, stressed subpopulations may appear, resulting in reduced quantity and quality of the production. Indeed, stressed cells consume nutrients and space but have a reduced productivity (Davey et al., 1996). Several factors may induce heterogeneity in a population : desynchronisation in cell cycle phases, emergence of mutants or local variations in physico-chemical conditions within the reactor (Muller et al., 2010). Getting rid of these stressed subpopulations might be an effective way to increase both quality and quantity of production in bioreactors. </p> | Micro-organisms used to produce recombinant proteins in bioreactors are often seen as a homogeneous population. However, stressed subpopulations may appear, resulting in reduced quantity and quality of the production. Indeed, stressed cells consume nutrients and space but have a reduced productivity (Davey et al., 1996). Several factors may induce heterogeneity in a population : desynchronisation in cell cycle phases, emergence of mutants or local variations in physico-chemical conditions within the reactor (Muller et al., 2010). Getting rid of these stressed subpopulations might be an effective way to increase both quality and quantity of production in bioreactors. </p> | ||
<h3>The Mighty Coli solution</h3> | <h3>The Mighty Coli solution</h3> | ||
- | <p>We figured that the underlying problem of population heterogeneity is that the micro-organism do not have any | + | <p>We figured that the underlying problem of population heterogeneity is that the micro-organism do not have any advantage in the production of the protein of interest (PI), it's a unnecessary energy charge for the cell. They do not gain in fitness if they produce, and do not lose in fitness if they stop producing. If anything ... it would rather be the opposite!</p> |
We thus decided to give microorganisms some incentive to overproduce the PI. That would be done by killing the non-productive bacteria, or that would enter a stressed physiological state.</p> | We thus decided to give microorganisms some incentive to overproduce the PI. That would be done by killing the non-productive bacteria, or that would enter a stressed physiological state.</p> | ||
We used two genetic compounds to apply this principle and design $\MyColi$: the TA system and the 2A peptide. | We used two genetic compounds to apply this principle and design $\MyColi$: the TA system and the 2A peptide. | ||
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<center><img src="https://static.igem.org/mediawiki/2014/5/57/TIITA.png"> | <center><img src="https://static.igem.org/mediawiki/2014/5/57/TIITA.png"> | ||
</center> | </center> | ||
- | <br/><font size="1"><b>Figure 2 </b>: Type II TA systems. The toxin is a protein that inhibits a vital function (translation, replication, peptidoglycan synthesis, etc.) and the antitoxin is another protein that binds to this toxin, preventing it from causing harm to the cell. This antitoxin is often unstable and subject to | + | <br/><font size="1"><b>Figure 2 </b>: Type II TA systems. The toxin is a protein that inhibits a vital function of the cell (translation, replication, peptidoglycan synthesis, etc.) and the antitoxin is another protein that binds to this toxin, preventing it from causing harm to the cell. This antitoxin is often unstable and subject to a quick degradation. Should the transcription of the TA operon stops, the antitoxin would swiftly be degraded, allowing the toxin to kill or damage the cell. Type II TA operons are negatively regulated.</font> |
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<h3>CcdBA and the DNA gyrase</h3> | <h3>CcdBA and the DNA gyrase</h3> | ||
- | CcdBA is the most studied type II TA system where CcdB is the toxin and CcdA the antitoxin. CcdB is an inhibitor of the DNA gyrase, an enzyme that supercoils circular DNA, such as bacterial chromosomes and plasmids, making it more compact. DNA gyrase complexes must bind to DNA to perform supercoiling. CcdB binds the DNA gyrase subunit that binds to DNA and inhibits its activity when it is bound to DNA, resulting in DNA double strand breaks | + | CcdBA is the most studied type II TA system where CcdB is the toxin and CcdA the antitoxin. CcdB is an inhibitor of the DNA gyrase, an enzyme that supercoils circular DNA, such as bacterial chromosomes and plasmids, making it more compact. DNA gyrase complexes must bind to DNA to perform negative supercoiling during replication. CcdB binds the DNA gyrase subunit that binds to DNA and inhibits its activity when it is bound to DNA, resulting in DNA double strand breaks due to the progession of the DNA polymerase. It cause the activation of emergency signals and possibly death of the cell <b>[Fig. 3]</b> (Dao-Thi et al., 2005). |
</p> | </p> | ||
Revision as of 19:00, 9 October 2014
$~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ \newcommand{\MyColi}{{\small Mighty\hspace{0.12cm}Coli}} \newcommand{\Stabi}{\small Stabi}$ $\newcommand{\EColi}{\small E.coli} \newcommand{\SCere}{\small S.cerevisae}\\[0cm] ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ \newcommand{\PI}{\small PI}$ $\newcommand{\Igo}{\Large\mathcal{I}} \newcommand{\Tgo}{\Large\mathcal{T}} \newcommand{\Ogo}{\Large\mathcal{O}} ~$
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