<h3> Considerations for Replication of the Experiment </h3>
<h3> Considerations for Replication of the Experiment </h3>
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Several issues occurred during our first attempt at the three plasmid system, which we should like to avoid if we were to repeat the experiment. First of all, the usage of an Ampicillin resistance plasmid may have not been the best choice. As is evidenced by our microscopy, many E.Coli cells would grow far past the length of a healthy E.Coli, which we believe is largely due to the use of Ampicillin. Additionally, several weeks were spent troubleshooting our two-plasmid system before we moved from the pSB6A1 to pSB4A5 backbones. </p>
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Several issues occurred during our first attempt at the three plasmid system, which we should like to avoid if we were to repeat the experiment. First of all, the usage of an Ampicillin resistance plasmid may have not been the best choice. As is evidenced by our microscopy, many E.Coli cells would grow far past the length of a healthy E.Coli, which we believe is largely due to the use of Ampicillin. Additionally, several weeks were spent troubleshooting our two-plasmid system before we moved from the pSB6A1 to pSB4A5 backbones. Always double check that your plasmids are compatible! </p>
We set out at the beginning of the summer with the aim of consistently producing a bacterial microcompartment from a single protein, with the objective of adding a non-canonical amino acid at a point within its sequence that enables us to break these self-forming compartments apart using light. We have produced the following results:
1. We have successfully produced a one-protein BioBrick compatible part that forms microcompartments (EutS, BBa_K2129001)
2. We have tested and demonstrated the results of different expression levels of our EutS compartment with variable levels of tagged eGFP using a variable two-plasmid system and a variety of promoters (BBa_K2129003-K2129007)
3. We successfully mutated amber stop codons at at least three loci in the EutS gene
4. We introduced a 3-plasmid system using the AzoPhe pEVOL plasmid and then visualized the results of adding irradiated phenylalanine-4’-azobenzene to the medium of cells with the mutated plasmids
5. We attempted to produce similar results using genome modification of NEB-5alpha e.coli cells, and produced a library of genomic edits towards this end.
Construction of the EutS BioBrick compatible part
Using the part EutSMNLK (BBa_K311004), we PCR amplified out the S protein of the operon and cloned it alone onto a plasmid backbone. Testing using our two-plasmid system has demonstrated that EutS does indeed produce localization of EutC tagged fluorescent proteins, as described in Schmidt-Dannert et al. 2016 (PMID: 27063436). Our system is fully BioBrick compatible and extremely simple, producing localization and compartmentalization with a minimum of necessary protein expression.