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<img src="https://static.igem.org/mediawiki/2016/e/e7/TCU-proof1.PNG" style="width:648px;height:600px; padding: 10px 10px 10px 10px; "> | <img src="https://static.igem.org/mediawiki/2016/e/e7/TCU-proof1.PNG" style="width:648px;height:600px; padding: 10px 10px 10px 10px; "> | ||
− | <figcaption float="center" style = "margin-left: 600px; width: 48em;">Fig. I: (A). EUT-operon diagram (asterisks indicate genes with proposed N-termini targeting peptide sequences—EutG N-terminal sequence was not shown to target assembling EUTs); (B). EUT BMC functional schematic indicating the putative biochemical pathway for the catabolism of cytotoxic ethanolamine substrate into biologically-inert products including ethyl alcohol, acetyl-phosphate, and acetyl-CoA. Figure courtesy Choudhary et alii research team; cited from pp. 3 of <i> Engineered Protein Nano-Compartments for Targeted Enzyme Localization </i> in PlosOne. </figcaption> | + | <figcaption float="center" style = "margin-left: 600px; width: 48em;">Fig. I: (A). EUT-operon diagram (asterisks indicate genes with proposed N-termini targeting peptide sequences—EutG N-terminal sequence was not shown to target assembling EUTs); (B). EUT BMC functional schematic indicating the putative biochemical pathway for the catabolism of cytotoxic ethanolamine substrate into biologically-inert products including ethyl alcohol, acetyl-phosphate, and acetyl-CoA. Figure courtesy Choudhary et alii research team; cited from pp. 3 of <i> Engineered Protein Nano-Compartments for Targeted Enzyme Localization </i> in PlosOne. </figcaption>--> |
<h2> Controlling Ethanolamine Utilization Compartments </h2> | <h2> Controlling Ethanolamine Utilization Compartments </h2> |
Revision as of 15:55, 19 October 2016
Improving Ethanolamine Utilization Compartments
Bacterial microcompartments (BMCs) occur in nature to encapsulate enzymatic and metabolic processes in organisms such as E.coli. We have focused our work on the simplest BMC, the ethanolamine utilization compartment (EUT). Our goal is to engineer the an improved EUT that requires minimal genes and can reversibly assemble and disassemble by the introducing a non-natural amino acid into the outer shell protein. Previous iGEM teams have already taken advantage of the full naturally forming compartment with the EutSMNLK gene, but we have found that it is still possible to form a EUT compartment by expression of only the EutS portion of the gene. This EutS gene codes for a protein that forms the hexameric tiles which make up the EUT compartment shell and can associate with EutC tagged proteins. The formation of compartments will be visualized through EutC tagged eGFP localization within the Euts compartments. Various levels of EutCeGFP and EutS expression have led us to an optimal combination that allows the formation of at least one compartment with enough fluorescence to see, but not so much that its bleaches the resulting image.