Team:uOttawa/project

From 2014.igem.org

(Difference between revisions)
Line 49: Line 49:
             <a href="#" data-pane="tristable">The Tri-Stable Switch</a>
             <a href="#" data-pane="tristable">The Tri-Stable Switch</a>
             <a href="#" data-pane="promoters">Promoters</a>
             <a href="#" data-pane="promoters">Promoters</a>
 +
            <a href="#" data-pane="wres">Results</a>
             <a href="#" data-pane="bricks">Biobricks</a>
             <a href="#" data-pane="bricks">Biobricks</a>
             <a href="#" data-pane="interlab">Interlab Study</a>
             <a href="#" data-pane="interlab">Interlab Study</a>
Line 187: Line 188:
                 <p>This promoter was originally designed and tested by Tom Ellis et al. 2009.</p>
                 <p>This promoter was originally designed and tested by Tom Ellis et al. 2009.</p>
 +
            </div>
 +
<div class="pane" id="pane-wres" hidden>
 +
                <h1>Results</h1>
 +
                <p>The bulk of our project lay in designing, testing and characterizing the key promoters within our designs. Below are a summary of the results we obtained through the summer.</p>
 +
 +
                <h2>Repression by Activation</h2>
 +
                <p>The characterization of repression via the binding of hindering activators was the integral part of our project. Below are characterizations of the two promoters we modified and/or designed for our project. For all the following graphs, the X and Y axes show small molecule concentration, which can either represent increased activation or repression, depending on the promoter. Below is an example of strong repression by rtTA. </p>
 +
                <figure>
 +
                    <img src="https://static.igem.org/mediawiki/2014/0/0f/Uo2014-res1.png" alt="">
 +
                    <p>Characterization of pGALtx via dual drug induction. pGALtx has four activating gal4 sites upstream of the TATA box and 2 repressing tet sites downstream. Estradiol then represents promoter activation and aTc promoter repression. rtTA is driven by a strong constitutive promoter. GFP is represented by arbitrary fluorescence units obtained from our flow cytometer. </p>
 +
                </figure>
 +
                <p>However, when we first characterised these promoters, we were using a weaker constitutive promoter to drive the repressing activator. By using a strong repressor we got dramatically increased repression, indicating a certain saturation point is required of activator for repression to be robust.</p>
 +
                <figure class="full">
 +
                    <img src="https://static.igem.org/mediawiki/2014/b/bd/Uo2014-res2.png" alt="">
 +
                    <p>Four activator site pGALtx under different repressor saturation. pGALtx has 4 activating gal4 sites and 2 repressing tet sites. On the left, rtTA is driven by the weak constitutive promoter mrp7 and on the right rtTA is driven by the strong constitutive promoter pADH1. aTc reprosents amount of repressing activator funcitonal, while estradiol activating activator.  </p>
 +
                </figure>
 +
 +
                <h2>Number of Activating Sites</h2>
 +
                <p>The number of activating sites were also vaired. It was found that at least four sites were required to have significant enough expression. Below is a comparison between pTRE promoters, one with 4 sites the other 2 sites. As one can see, expression jumps from 4 fluorescence units to 30 at maximum.</p>
 +
                <figure>
 +
                    <img src="https://static.igem.org/mediawiki/2014/f/fa/Uo2014-res3.png" alt="">
 +
                    <p>Comparison of activation by two gal site and 4 gal site pgALtx. On the left is pGALtx with only two activating gal4 sites, and on the right is pGALtx with four activating gal4 sites. The activation by GEV is examined here, with estradiol drving activation. rtTA is behind a sweak promoter, so repression is minimal or non-existant. Any increases in activation with aTc is likely due to autofluorescence caused by the drug. </p>
 +
                </figure>
 +
 +
                <h2>Promoter Characterization</h2>
 +
                <p>We in fact  characterised all the main promoters used in our designs. Below are the remaining promters. All repression is shown with strong constitutive activation. </p>
 +
                <figure>
 +
                    <img src="https://static.igem.org/mediawiki/2014/e/ef/Uo2014-res4.png" alt="">
 +
                    <p>Characterization of pGAL via dual drug induction. pGAL has no pressing sites and 4 activating gal4 sites, so increasing estradiol increases activation while aTc has no effect beyond auto-fluorescence</p>
 +
                </figure>
             </div>
             </div>
             <div class="pane" id="pane-bricks" hidden>
             <div class="pane" id="pane-bricks" hidden>

Revision as of 20:44, 17 October 2014

The Project

Engineering Fate: Cellular decision making and the Tri-Stable switch

Throughout our lives individual cells make vital decisions that directly affect us. From deciding what to become, to when to die.

We decided to examine how cells make those decisions.

It was hypothesized that a unique tri-stable switch controlled stem cell differentiation, where the three states are an arbitrary state A, B and a unique state where both states coexists stably (AB).

Design adapted from Sui Huang, 2009.

For instance, if A was making blue marbles and B red marbles, the three states would look like this:

Now instead of marbles, lets image A and B as cell types like liver cells and heart cells, and the AB state the undifferentiated state!

This is a primary example of cellular decision making. The 2014 uOttwa iGEM team chose to build this decision making pathway. To do so we created novel form of gene regulation, using activators as repressors.

Why build such a system? Understanding how this genetic network works and being able to model its behaviour may shed light on how exactly stem cells differentiate. More importantly, it will allow us to engineer cells that implement this synthetic decision-making pathway, and use it in an application such as logic gates.

Or, we may use this system as a unique cellular detector. If A and B are reporters driven by promoters that are sensitive to small molecules like phosphorous and nitrogen, these cells can monitor the balance between those two. The balance between those two is an important indicator of human pollution, which is indicated by high levels of phosphorous. If one spikes higher than the other, the cell will enter an A or B state, giving an indicator. If both spike, it will remain in the AB and indicate an equilibrium.