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<p class = "main"> | <p class = "main"> | ||
− | <p class = "main">Bacterial microcompartments (BMCs) are endogenous platforms ideally suited for synthetic biology, as modular protein structures of relatively simple construction. Of the three known BMCs (carboxysomes, PDUs, and | + | <p class = "main">Bacterial microcompartments (BMCs) are endogenous platforms ideally suited for synthetic biology, as modular protein structures of relatively simple construction. Of the three known BMCs (carboxysomes, PDUs, and Euts), Euts were chosen as candidates for photo-mechanization due to their comparatively straightforward assembly. While carboxysomes and PDUs require precise ratios of coexpressed protein subunits to assemble, the ethanolamine utilizing microcompartments’ shell can form in vivo from a single subunit: EutS. Our research focused on the incorporation of azobenzene-sidechain noncanonical amino acids into the EutS protein, which was hypothesized to confer the nanocages with a photo-switchable function for assembly and disassembly. </p> |
<figure align="center"> | <figure align="center"> | ||
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<p class = "main">Photo-mechanized protein nanocages could serve as adaptable tools for a broad spectrum of synthetic biologists and engineers; applications include compartmentally isolated biocatalyses, and targeted cargo transport and delivery (e.g. precise drug delivery). As such, our research has emphasized general optimization of a light-induced nanocage, although avenues to specific applications have been partially paved in the process. </p> | <p class = "main">Photo-mechanized protein nanocages could serve as adaptable tools for a broad spectrum of synthetic biologists and engineers; applications include compartmentally isolated biocatalyses, and targeted cargo transport and delivery (e.g. precise drug delivery). As such, our research has emphasized general optimization of a light-induced nanocage, although avenues to specific applications have been partially paved in the process. </p> | ||
− | <p class = "main">Protein nanocages like | + | <p class = "main">Protein nanocages like the Eut are attractive subjects for engineered modifications, since their shells’ structural uniformity reduces the influence of unknown variables on our understanding of the BMC system. Although bacterially-encoded Eut complexes contain several shell protein constituent subunits (including EutS, M, N, L, & K), the EutS component is sufficient for complete shell formation in vivo. EutS homohexamerizes, then further complexes with additional homohexamers to form polyhedral nanocages with predictable subunit interfaces and vertices. Rosetta and PyMol were employed in analyzing the thermodynamically favorable interfacing of subunits, and identifying corresponding residues at which azobenzene substitutions wouldn’t disrupt nanocage assembly.</p> |
<figure align="center"> | <figure align="center"> |
Revision as of 04:33, 18 October 2016
Project Description
Bacterial microcompartments (BMCs) are endogenous platforms ideally suited for synthetic biology, as modular protein structures of relatively simple construction. Of the three known BMCs (carboxysomes, PDUs, and Euts), Euts were chosen as candidates for photo-mechanization due to their comparatively straightforward assembly. While carboxysomes and PDUs require precise ratios of coexpressed protein subunits to assemble, the ethanolamine utilizing microcompartments’ shell can form in vivo from a single subunit: EutS. Our research focused on the incorporation of azobenzene-sidechain noncanonical amino acids into the EutS protein, which was hypothesized to confer the nanocages with a photo-switchable function for assembly and disassembly.