Difference between revisions of "Team:Aalto-Helsinki/Description"

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       would be promising for considering potential production in eukaryotic organisms such P. pastoris. This gave us additional motivation to use
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       would be promising for considering potential production in eukaryotic organisms such as <i>P. pastoris</i>. This gave us additional motivation to use
 
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       E. coli
 
       E. coli
 
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       construct as it had the unexplained single amino acid difference to the closest available sequence. For our plasmid backbones, we decided to use ones we had available in our lab: to express MlrA
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       construct as it had the unexplained single amino acid difference to the closest available sequence. For our plasmid backbones, we decided to use ones we had available in our lab: to express MlrA in
 
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       E. coli
 
       E. coli
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       For yeast, as there were no available plasmid backbones for yeast in the BioBricks registry, we decided to use pRS415-GAL. This plasmid is well suited for protein expression inducible by galactose. Although we could have designed our insert to be cloned into the backbone using the XbaI restriction enzyme on the 5’ end, we reasoned that using biobrick-compatible restriction sites would potentially undermine the expression of our construct. Having the XbaI restriction site directly upstream of the protein coding sequence, as the use of the BioBricks suffix requires, would result in a T as the -3 base upstream of the start codon. It has been reported that in eukaryotic translation initiation, the -3 base is optimally an A or G (Kozak, 1996). This base is key in defining translation initiation, as changing it into a T or C increases sensitivity to differences in other bases upstream of the start codon. Cavener et al. (1991) on the other hand showed that yeast has a strong bias for A in this position. Nakagawa et al. (2008) concurred with this conclusion, in addition to pointing out a strong bias for T as the base following the start codon. Because our protein sequence didn’t contain this feature, we reasoned that having a suitable upstream sequence would be doubly important.
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       For yeast, as there were no available plasmid backbones for yeast in the BioBricks registry, we decided to use pRS415-GAL. This plasmid is well suited for protein expression inducible by galactose. Although we could have designed our insert to be cloned into the backbone using the XbaI restriction enzyme on the 5’ end, we reasoned that using biobrick-compatible restriction sites would potentially undermine the expression of our construct. Having the XbaI restriction site directly upstream of the protein coding sequence, as the use of the BioBricks suffix requires, would result in a T as the -3 base upstream of the start codon. It has been reported that in eukaryotic translation initiation, the -3 base is optimally an A or G (Kozak, 1996). This base is key in defining translation initiation, as changing it into a T or C increases sensitivity to differences in other bases upstream of the start codon. Cavener et al. (1991) on the other hand showed that yeast has a strong bias for A in this position. Nakagawa et al. (2008) concurred with this conclusion, in addition to pointing out a strong bias for G as the base following the start codon. Because our protein sequence didn’t contain this feature, we reasoned that having a suitable upstream sequence would be doubly important.
 
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       Kozak, M. Point mutations define a sequence flanking the AUG initiator codon that modulates translation by eukaryotic ribosomes. 1996.  Cell,  44(2), pp. 283-292
 
       Kozak, M. Point mutations define a sequence flanking the AUG initiator codon that modulates translation by eukaryotic ribosomes. 1996.  Cell,  44(2), pp. 283-292
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      Nakagawa, S., Niimura, Y., Gojobori, T., Tanaka, H., Miura, K. Diversity of preferred nucleotide sequences around the translation initiation codon in eukaryote genomes. 2008.  Nucleic Acids Research,  36(3), pp. 861-871
 
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Revision as of 16:59, 7 November 2016

Aalto-Helsinki

PROJECT