Difference between revisions of "Team:Pasteur Paris/Science"

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Since the cellulose-based patch alone could not detect mosquito-borne pathogens, we used a multifunctional fusion protein to make it stronger. This protein binded to the cellulose-based patch and made it stronger by biocondensing silicic acid into silica and fixing specific antibodies. Therefore, we took advantage of the silica-binding peptide (designated by Si4), the B domain of staphylococcal protein A (designated by BpA), and the cellulose-binding domain of cellulose-binding protein A (designated by CBPa). Since it was important that Si4 and BpA were not close in order to avoid steric hindrance of the paratope by condensated silica, we designed the fusion protein as Si4-CBPa-BpA (Fig 2).</br></br></br></br>
 
Since the cellulose-based patch alone could not detect mosquito-borne pathogens, we used a multifunctional fusion protein to make it stronger. This protein binded to the cellulose-based patch and made it stronger by biocondensing silicic acid into silica and fixing specific antibodies. Therefore, we took advantage of the silica-binding peptide (designated by Si4), the B domain of staphylococcal protein A (designated by BpA), and the cellulose-binding domain of cellulose-binding protein A (designated by CBPa). Since it was important that Si4 and BpA were not close in order to avoid steric hindrance of the paratope by condensated silica, we designed the fusion protein as Si4-CBPa-BpA (Fig 2).</br></br></br></br>
  
<center><img src="https://static.igem.org/mediawiki/2016/d/d5/Fig2science_pasteur.png" alt="" width="90%" /></img></center></br></br>
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<center><img src="https://static.igem.org/mediawiki/2016/c/cf/T--Pasteur_Paris--PATCH.png" alt="" width="90%" /></img></center></br></br>
 
<center><B>Figure 2. Fusion protein Si4-CBPa-BpA.</B></center> </br></br></br>
 
<center><B>Figure 2. Fusion protein Si4-CBPa-BpA.</B></center> </br></br></br>
 
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Revision as of 21:14, 18 October 2016