Team:Austin Texas/kit

From 2014.igem.org

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==Background==
==Background==
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The genetic code is a composition of 20 highly conserved amino acids that are essential to all organisms on Earth. While specific, the genetic code is degenerate which conveniently adds flexibility to the code. By re-coding one of the redundancies, a codon can signal for the incorporation of an ncAA rather than the original canonical. The Amber codon is the least abundant stop codon of amber, ochre, and opal and thus perfect for re-coding purposes due to minimization of resulting disruptions in the cell.
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The genetic code is a composition of 20 highly conserved amino acids that are essential to all organisms on Earth. While specific, the genetic code is degenerate which conveniently adds flexibility to the code. By recoding one of the redundancies, a codon can signal for the incorporation of a non-canonical amino acid (ncAA) rather than the codon's original usage. Of the three stop codons (amber, opal and ochre), the amber codon is the least abundant of the three and thus, the easiest and most efficient to recode.
   
   
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Complications arise when the genetic code is recoded. In a normal bacterium, release factor RF1 is responsible for terminating translation when the ribosome reaches the amber stop codon. To avoid termination at a UAG amber codon, a strain of ''E. coli'' was engineered by the Church and Isaacs groups using MAGE and CAGE ('''ref''') to remove all of the amber codons from the genome and knock out the RF1 gene. The resulting strain, called "amberless" ''E. coli'', has its amber codon free to code for any ncAA. During translation, a synthetase with mutations that allow the acceptance of a different amino acid than the wild type charges that ncAA onto a tRNA with the amber codon's anticodon, ATC, when both are present in the cell.
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Complications arise when the genetic code is re-coded. Release Factor RF1 is responsible for terminating translation when the ribosome reaches the Amber stop codon. To avoid termination at UAG, a strain of E. Coli was engineered to remove the RF1 gene. During translation, the ncAA synthetase charges an ncAA onto the tRNA. Rather than translation termination, the tRNA enters the ribosome for ncAA incorporation and translation continues. Another complication occurs in the RFO strain of E. Coli due to the presence of Amber codons on the F plasmid. The F plasmid contains essential genes to the cell. The functionality of the proteins encoded would be compromised in a genetically expanded cell. To prevent this lethality, a strain of E. Coli with the RF1 knockout was engineered to have alternative stop codons on the F plasmid known as Amberless E. Coli.  
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==Experimental Design and Method==
==Experimental Design and Method==

Revision as of 05:42, 12 October 2014