Difference between revisions of "Team:NAWI-Graz/Description"

m
 
(7 intermediate revisions by 3 users not shown)
Line 150: Line 150:
 
<ul class="dropdown-menu">
 
<ul class="dropdown-menu">
 
<li><a href="/Team:NAWI-Graz/Human_Practices">Human Practices</a></li>
 
<li><a href="/Team:NAWI-Graz/Human_Practices">Human Practices</a></li>
<li><a href="/Team:NAWI-Graz/Silver">Design</a></li>
+
<li><a href="/Team:NAWI-Graz/Silver">Silver</a></li>
<li><a href="/Team:NAWI-Graz/Gold">Experiments</a></li>
+
<li><a href="/Team:NAWI-Graz/Integrated_Practices">Integrated Practices</a></li>
+
 
</ul>
 
</ul>
 
</li>
 
</li>
 
<li class="dropdown-full-color dropdown-secondary">
 
<li class="dropdown-full-color dropdown-secondary">
<a href="#sponsoring">
+
<a href="/Team:NAWI-Graz/Sponsor">
 
Sponsoring
 
Sponsoring
 
</a>
 
</a>
Line 175: Line 174:
 
 
 
<section class="section-custom-medical">
 
<section class="section-custom-medical">
<div class="container">
+
<div class="container">
<div class="row mt-xlg pt-xlg mb-xlg pb-xs">
+
<div class="row mt-xlg pt-xlg mb-xlg pb-xs">
 
<div class="col-sm-8 col-md-8">
 
<div class="col-sm-8 col-md-8">
 
<!--
 
<!--
Line 182: Line 181:
 
<p class="lead font-weight-normal">The Last Colinator</p>-->
 
<p class="lead font-weight-normal">The Last Colinator</p>-->
  
<p>Tell us about your project, describe what moves you and why this is something important for your team.</p>
+
<h2 class="mt-xl mb-none"><span class="alternative-font font-size-md">What should this page contain?</span></h2>
+
<h2 class="mt-xl mb-none"><strong>Our Project</strong><span class="alternative-font font-size-md">The Last Colinator!</span></h2>
 +
 +
<p>
 +
The human microbiome – the totality of all on and in us living microorganisms represents about 2 kilos or
 +
4 pounds of our body weight. The world of microorganisms has by now left specialized laboratories or ancient
 +
textbooks and reached the minds of people every day. The awareness about bacteria-human interaction increases steadily.
 +
</p>
 +
 
 
<p>
 
<p>
A clear and concise description of your project.
+
The market for probiotics is booming, resistance against antibiotics causes losses in billions each year,
A detailed explanation of why your team chose to work on this particular project.
+
not to mention human health effects. At exactly this point our project sets in. Our goal is to develop new
References and sources to document your research.
+
metabolic pathways which allow our test bacteria to utilize nutrients more efficiently, to degrade toxins or
Use illustrations and other visual resources to explain your project.
+
to produce new antibiotics. To come straight to the point our project, called „The Last Colinator“, is dealing
 +
with selective pressure, spontaneous mutation, antibiotics resistance and the finding of new selection markers.
 
</p>
 
</p>
  
 
<h2 class="mt-xl mb-none"><span class="alternative-font font-size-md">Advice on writing your Project Description</span></h2>
 
 
<p>
 
<p>
We encourage you to put up a lot of information and content on your wiki, but we also
+
To reach this goal it is not enough to sit back and wait for the bacteria to do it on its own, the mills of
encourage you to include summaries as much as possible. If you think of the sections
+
evolution grind slowly. The driving force of evolution is stress in form of changing environment conditions
in your project description as the sections in a publication, you should try to be consist,
+
as food shortage, changes in climate, natural enemies etc. Exactly those evolutionary conditions we are about to simulate.  
accurate and unambiguous in your achievements.
+
Judges like to read your wiki and know exactly what you have achieved. This is how you
+
should think about these sections; from the point of view of the judge evaluating you at the end of the year.
+
<f/p>
+
+
<h2 class="mt-xl mb-none"><span class="alternative-font font-size-md">References</span></h2>
+
<p>
+
iGEM teams are encouraged to record references you use during the course of your research.
+
They should be posted somewhere on your wiki so that judges and other visitors can see how
+
you thought about your project and what works inspired you.
+
 
</p>
 
</p>
</div>
+
 
</div>
+
<p>
</div>
+
On a culture dish – the arena – we spread out two different bacteria strains – the competitors. Each strain
</section>
+
is equipped with certain skills which are harmful or which give it a protective shield against the competitor.
 +
That may be the ability to produce a toxin, to grow faster, to have better defense mechanisms etc.
 +
Those abilities are genetically determined by genes and therefore can be modified by molecular biologic methods.
 +
We are modifying our genes of interest in a way that they are more prone to mutagenesis by environmental stress
 +
and are thereby more effective in adapting on changing conditions.
 +
</p>
 +
 
 +
<p>
 +
Altogether 2 different strains of <i>Escherichia coli</i> are used and created, different features each.
 +
Strain 1 for example comprises ccdB/ccdA genes (toxin-antitoxin-system), a DAM methylase gene and a
 +
chromoprotein gene for the visible tracking. Every strain receives its own characteristic chromoprotein genes,
 +
as well as, toxin/antitoxin genes. Every stain gets the DAM-methylase gene, though. The DAM-methylase leads to
 +
increased spontaneous mutation.
 +
</p>
 +
 
 +
 
 +
<p>
 +
The environmental conditions like nutrient availability, temperature, pH etc. are chosen in a manner
 +
to generate highest possible stress for the bacteria, this will push evolution additionally. At the end
 +
one strain will be the sole survivor. The reason for its survival will be the fact that it developed a way
 +
or an ability to adapt faster or more efficient to those harsh life conditions. That may now be a new antibiotic,
 +
a new metabolic pathway for toxin degradation, better utilization of nutrients or many more. Furthermore, innumerable
 +
selection markers are created. These markers can later be utilized in various projects, e.g. at the creation of recombinant proteins.
 +
</p>
 +
 
 +
<p><b>
 +
ccdA/ccdB
 +
</b></p>
 +
<p>
 +
The ccdB/ccdA toxin- antitoxin-system (TA) is a type II system. This means that the toxin is a protein and also the antitoxin is a small hydrophobic protein. By contrast, in type I systems the antitoxin is a small RNA which inhibits the expression of the toxin (PMID 19325885).
 +
If a bacterium only carries the gene of the toxin it would kill itself by interacting with the DNA gyrase (the GyrA subunit). This results in the DNA gyrase is not being able to generate and rejoin double strand breaks in the DNA, which blocks the DNA replication (PMID 19325885, PMID 10196173).
 +
Is the antitoxin, in this case ccdA, gene also present, it interacts with ccdB and inhibits the toxic effect (PMID 19325885, PMID 11454201).
 +
</p>
 +
 
 +
<p><b>
 +
MazEF
 +
</b></p>
 +
<p>
 +
MazEF, a toxin-antitoxin locus found in E. coli and other bacteria, induces programmed cell death in response to starvation. Under normal conditions there the toxin and the antitoxin are in balance. If stress occurs, the chemically less stable antidote MazE is not as powerful anymore and the toxin can release its toxic endoribonuclease activity, leading to mRNA degradation. Even if this effect can be rescued by expression of MazE, after 6 hours in rich medium overexpression of MazF leads to programmed cell death (PubMed:8650219, PubMed:11222603). MazF-mediated cell death occurs following a number of stress conditions in a relA-dependent fashion and only when cells are in log phase; sigma factor S (rpoS) protects stationary phase cells from MazF-killing (PubMed:15150257, PubMed:19251848). Cell growth and viability are not affected when MazF and MazE are coexpressed. There are several types of toxin-antitoxin systems. MazEF is a type II toxin-antitoxin (TA) module. </p>
 
 
 
 
-->
 
 
 
<section>
+
<a class="btn btn-borders btn-quaternary custom-button text-uppercase mt-lg mb-lg font-weight-bold">read more</a>
<div class="container">
+
<div class="row mt-md">
+
 
+
<div id="sponsoring" class="col-md-12">
+
<h1><span class="alternative-font font-size-md">Sponsoring</span></h1>
+
<!--<h2 class="font-weight-semibold m-none">Sponsoring</h2>
+
<p class="lead font-weight-normal">List of all sponsors</p>-->
+
 
</div>
 
</div>
</div>
+
<div class="col-sm-4 col-md-4">
<div class="row mb-xlg pb-xlg">
+
<img src="/wiki/images/e/eb/Fig1.jpeg" alt class="img-responsive box-shadow-custom" />  
<div class="content-grid pl-md pr-md">
+
</div>
<div class="content-grid-row">
+
<div class="col-sm-4 col-md-4">
<div class="content-grid-item col-sm-4 col-md-2 center">
+
<img src="/wiki/images/4/4b/Fig2.jpeg" alt class="img-responsive box-shadow-custom" />  
<img src="/wiki/images/e/e5/KFU.jpeg" alt class="img-responsive" />
+
</div>
+
<div class="content-grid-item col-sm-4 col-md-2 center">
+
<img src="/wiki/images/5/5f/TU_Graz.jpeg" alt class="img-responsive" />
+
</div>
+
<div class="content-grid-item col-sm-4 col-md-2 center">
+
<img src="/wiki/images/b/b2/T--NAWI-Graz--StefitzLogo.png" alt class="img-responsive" />
+
</div>
+
<div class="content-grid-item col-sm-4 col-md-2 center">
+
<img src="/wiki/images/9/9f/Thermo-Fisher.jpeg" alt class="img-responsive" />
+
</div>
+
<div class="content-grid-item col-sm-4 col-md-2 center">
+
<img src="/wiki/images/1/1a/Zeta.jpeg" alt class="img-responsive" />
+
</div>
+
<div class="content-grid-item col-sm-4 col-md-2 center">
+
<img src="/wiki/images/0/00/Microsynth.jpeg" alt class="img-responsive" />
+
</div>
+
<div class="content-grid-item col-sm-4 col-md-2 center">
+
<img src="/wiki/images/3/3b/T--NAWI-Graz--Schursches-Insel-Cafe-Logo.jpeg" alt class="img-responsive" />
+
</div>
+
</div>
+
 
</div>
 
</div>
 
</div>
 
</div>
 
</div>
 
</div>
 
</section>
 
</section>
 +
 +
 
 
 +
 
<footer id="footer" class="m-none">
 
<footer id="footer" class="m-none">
 
<div class="container">
 
<div class="container">
 +
 +
 +
<div class="row mb-xlg">
 +
<div class="col-md-12">
 +
 +
<div class="row show-grid">
 +
<div class="col-md-1"><span class="show-grid-block"><img src="/wiki/images/b/b2/T--NAWI-Graz--StefitzLogo.png" alt class="img-responsive" /></span></div>
 +
<div class="col-md-1"><span class="show-grid-block"><img src="/wiki/images/9/9f/Thermo-Fisher.jpeg" alt class="img-responsive" /></span></div>
 +
<div class="col-md-1"><span class="show-grid-block"><img src="/wiki/images/1/1a/Zeta.jpeg" alt class="img-responsive" /></span></div>
 +
<div class="col-md-1"><span class="show-grid-block"><img src="/wiki/images/0/00/Microsynth.jpeg" alt class="img-responsive" /></span></div>
 +
<div class="col-md-1"><span class="show-grid-block"><img src="/wiki/images/3/3b/T--NAWI-Graz--Schursches-Insel-Cafe-Logo.jpeg" alt class="img-responsive" /></span></div>
 +
<div class="col-md-1"><span class="show-grid-block"><img src="/wiki/images/3/39/T--NAWI-Graz--snapgene.png" alt class="img-responsive" /> </span></div>
 +
<div class="col-md-1"><span class="show-grid-block"><img src="/wiki/images/e/e5/KFU.jpeg" alt class="img-responsive" /></span></div>
 +
<div class="col-md-1"><span class="show-grid-block"><img src="/wiki/images/5/5f/TU_Graz.jpeg" alt class="img-responsive" /></span></div>
 +
<div class="col-md-1"><span class="show-grid-block"><img src="/wiki/images/7/76/T--NAWI-Graz--servolab.png" alt class="img-responsive" /></span></div>
 +
<div class="col-md-1"><span class="show-grid-block"><img src="/wiki/images/1/1e/T--NAWI-Graz--bartelt.png" alt class="img-responsive" /></span></div>
 +
<div class="col-md-1"><span class="show-grid-block"><img src="/wiki/images/4/44/T--NAWI-Graz--greiner-logo.png" alt class="img-responsive" /></span></div>
 +
<div class="col-md-1"><span class="show-grid-block"><img src="/wiki/images/1/11/T--NAWI-Graz--IDT-Logo.png" alt class="img-responsive" /></span></div>
 +
 +
</div>
 +
</div>
 +
</div>
 +
 
<div class="row">
 
<div class="row">
 
<div class="col-md-3">
 
<div class="col-md-3">
Line 266: Line 296:
 
8010 Graz, AUT<br>
 
8010 Graz, AUT<br>
 
</p>
 
</p>
</div><!--
+
</div>
 
<div class="col-md-3 col-md-offset-1">
 
<div class="col-md-3 col-md-offset-1">
 
<div class="contact-details">
 
<div class="contact-details">
 
<h4 class="mb-xlg">Mail address</h4>
 
<h4 class="mb-xlg">Mail address</h4>
<a class="text-decoration-none" href="tel:1234567890">
+
<a class="text-decoration-none" href="mailto:igem.nawigraz@gmail.com">
<strong class="font-weight-light">member@test.com</strong>
+
igem.nawigraz@gmail.com
 
</a>
 
</a>
 
</div>
 
</div>
</div>-->
+
</div>
 
<div class="col-md-2">
 
<div class="col-md-2">
 
<h4 class="mb-xlg">Social Media</h4>
 
<h4 class="mb-xlg">Social Media</h4>

Latest revision as of 17:08, 19 October 2016

NAWI-Graz @ iGem - Description

Our ProjectThe Last Colinator!

The human microbiome – the totality of all on and in us living microorganisms represents about 2 kilos or 4 pounds of our body weight. The world of microorganisms has by now left specialized laboratories or ancient textbooks and reached the minds of people every day. The awareness about bacteria-human interaction increases steadily.

The market for probiotics is booming, resistance against antibiotics causes losses in billions each year, not to mention human health effects. At exactly this point our project sets in. Our goal is to develop new metabolic pathways which allow our test bacteria to utilize nutrients more efficiently, to degrade toxins or to produce new antibiotics. To come straight to the point our project, called „The Last Colinator“, is dealing with selective pressure, spontaneous mutation, antibiotics resistance and the finding of new selection markers.

To reach this goal it is not enough to sit back and wait for the bacteria to do it on its own, the mills of evolution grind slowly. The driving force of evolution is stress in form of changing environment conditions as food shortage, changes in climate, natural enemies etc. Exactly those evolutionary conditions we are about to simulate.

On a culture dish – the arena – we spread out two different bacteria strains – the competitors. Each strain is equipped with certain skills which are harmful or which give it a protective shield against the competitor. That may be the ability to produce a toxin, to grow faster, to have better defense mechanisms etc. Those abilities are genetically determined by genes and therefore can be modified by molecular biologic methods. We are modifying our genes of interest in a way that they are more prone to mutagenesis by environmental stress and are thereby more effective in adapting on changing conditions.

Altogether 2 different strains of Escherichia coli are used and created, different features each. Strain 1 for example comprises ccdB/ccdA genes (toxin-antitoxin-system), a DAM methylase gene and a chromoprotein gene for the visible tracking. Every strain receives its own characteristic chromoprotein genes, as well as, toxin/antitoxin genes. Every stain gets the DAM-methylase gene, though. The DAM-methylase leads to increased spontaneous mutation.

The environmental conditions like nutrient availability, temperature, pH etc. are chosen in a manner to generate highest possible stress for the bacteria, this will push evolution additionally. At the end one strain will be the sole survivor. The reason for its survival will be the fact that it developed a way or an ability to adapt faster or more efficient to those harsh life conditions. That may now be a new antibiotic, a new metabolic pathway for toxin degradation, better utilization of nutrients or many more. Furthermore, innumerable selection markers are created. These markers can later be utilized in various projects, e.g. at the creation of recombinant proteins.

ccdA/ccdB

The ccdB/ccdA toxin- antitoxin-system (TA) is a type II system. This means that the toxin is a protein and also the antitoxin is a small hydrophobic protein. By contrast, in type I systems the antitoxin is a small RNA which inhibits the expression of the toxin (PMID 19325885). If a bacterium only carries the gene of the toxin it would kill itself by interacting with the DNA gyrase (the GyrA subunit). This results in the DNA gyrase is not being able to generate and rejoin double strand breaks in the DNA, which blocks the DNA replication (PMID 19325885, PMID 10196173). Is the antitoxin, in this case ccdA, gene also present, it interacts with ccdB and inhibits the toxic effect (PMID 19325885, PMID 11454201).

MazEF

MazEF, a toxin-antitoxin locus found in E. coli and other bacteria, induces programmed cell death in response to starvation. Under normal conditions there the toxin and the antitoxin are in balance. If stress occurs, the chemically less stable antidote MazE is not as powerful anymore and the toxin can release its toxic endoribonuclease activity, leading to mRNA degradation. Even if this effect can be rescued by expression of MazE, after 6 hours in rich medium overexpression of MazF leads to programmed cell death (PubMed:8650219, PubMed:11222603). MazF-mediated cell death occurs following a number of stress conditions in a relA-dependent fashion and only when cells are in log phase; sigma factor S (rpoS) protects stationary phase cells from MazF-killing (PubMed:15150257, PubMed:19251848). Cell growth and viability are not affected when MazF and MazE are coexpressed. There are several types of toxin-antitoxin systems. MazEF is a type II toxin-antitoxin (TA) module.

read more

Location

NAWI Graz
Petersgasse 12
8010 Graz, AUT

Social Media