Difference between revisions of "Team:Exeter/Project"

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<h3>Metabolic kill switch</h3>
 
<h3>Metabolic kill switch</h3>
  
<p id="pp">KillerRed and KillerOrange are fluorescent proteins which, when irradiated with green and blue light respectively, generate reactive oxygen species (ROS).  
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<p id="pp">Our metabolic kill switches builds on previous iGEM projects that have used the expression of highly phototoxic fluorescent proteins to kill the cells by exposing the culture to light.  KillerRed and KillerOrange are homologues of GFP which, when irradiated with green and blue light respectively, generate reactive oxygen species (ROS). KillerRed has been shown to effectively kill cells when exposed to green light (540–580 nm) and is much less effective under blue light (460–490 nm) (Bulina, 2006). KillerOrange effectively kills cells when exposed to 450-495nm (Sarkisyan 2015), the range that KillerRed does not. Firstly we aimed to improve KillerRed, an existing registry part, by codon optimising it for E. coli and then improving its characterisation. Alongside this we have characterised KillerOrange. Once we had established how effectively these proteins killed the cells we began growing a cultures containing the kill switches in the ministat.</p>
 
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KillerRed has been shown to effectively kill cells when exposed to green light (540–580 nm) and is much less effective under blue light(460–490 nm) (Bulina, 2006). KillerOrange is a mutant of KillerRed that is excited from 420-530nm that has been shown to work alongside KillerRed (Sarkisyan,2015). Our project has improved the characterisation of a KillerRed codon optimised for <i>E. coli</i>. We are also characterising KillerOrange in the same way. We aim to include both KillerRed and KillerOrange in the same system so as to be a more phototoxic. High levels of ROS lyse the cell but can also damage the DNA, this is an attractive prospect when developing a kill switch to reduce the risk of horizontal gene transfer (HGT).</p>
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<h6>Method</h6>
 
<h6>Method</h6>

Revision as of 19:25, 28 September 2016