Difference between revisions of "Team:Aix-Marseille/Composite Part"

(Mobilisation suderophore parts)
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We registered the original sequence of this subpart in the iGEM registry of standard parts (BBa_K1951000). We optimized our sequence for ''E.coli'' and ordered the synthesis by addition of an inductible promoter.
 
We registered the original sequence of this subpart in the iGEM registry of standard parts (BBa_K1951000). We optimized our sequence for ''E.coli'' and ordered the synthesis by addition of an inductible promoter.
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===BBa_K1941011 : Desferrioxamine B producer pathway <i> Streptomyces coelicolor </i> producer===
  
 
==Biosorption parts ==
 
==Biosorption parts ==
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===BBa_K1941009 : FliC <i> Desulfovibrio vulgaris </i> producer===
 
===BBa_K1941009 : FliC <i> Desulfovibrio vulgaris </i> producer===
  
===BBa_K19410010 : CsgA <i> Escherichia coli </i> producer===
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===BBa_K1941010 : CsgA <i> Escherichia coli </i> producer===
  
 
CsgA is the major and structural subunit of the curli fimbriae. Curli are coiled surface structures that assemble preferentially at growth temperatures below 37 degrees Celsius. Curli are the major proteinaceous component of a complex extracellular matrix produced by many Enterobacteriaceae. Curli were first discovered in the late 1980s on Escherichia coli strains that caused bovine mastitis, and have since been implicated in many physiological and pathogenic processes of E. coli and Salmonella spp. Curli fibers are involved in adhesion to surfaces, cell aggregation, and biofilm formation. Curli also mediate host cell adhesion and invasion, and they are potent inducers of the host inflammatory response. The biobrick contains a strong promotor.
 
CsgA is the major and structural subunit of the curli fimbriae. Curli are coiled surface structures that assemble preferentially at growth temperatures below 37 degrees Celsius. Curli are the major proteinaceous component of a complex extracellular matrix produced by many Enterobacteriaceae. Curli were first discovered in the late 1980s on Escherichia coli strains that caused bovine mastitis, and have since been implicated in many physiological and pathogenic processes of E. coli and Salmonella spp. Curli fibers are involved in adhesion to surfaces, cell aggregation, and biofilm formation. Curli also mediate host cell adhesion and invasion, and they are potent inducers of the host inflammatory response. The biobrick contains a strong promotor.

Revision as of 10:35, 15 October 2016