Difference between revisions of "Team:Austin UTexas/Results"

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<p>We then picked isolated colonies and streaked them out onto LB+DAP plates. After using 16s sequencing on the potential transconjugants, we encountered an anomaly. Instead of amplifying the 16s gene, we recieved the sequence of the L,D Transpeptidase gene of <i> E. coli </i>. We plan on repeating the 16s procedure.</p>
 
<p>We then picked isolated colonies and streaked them out onto LB+DAP plates. After using 16s sequencing on the potential transconjugants, we encountered an anomaly. Instead of amplifying the 16s gene, we recieved the sequence of the L,D Transpeptidase gene of <i> E. coli </i>. We plan on repeating the 16s procedure.</p>
 
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<center><img src="https://static.igem.org/mediawiki/2016/d/d6/T--Austin_UTexas--OngoingRecapitulations.png" alt="Conjugation2" style="width:80%;"></center><figcaption><b>Figure 2:</b>Shows samples from a series of completed recapitulation trials. A negative control triplicate set contained only tea media and experienced no microbial growth after 7 days. The positive control was inoculated with 600 uL of home-brewed kombucha and possessed distinct pellicle formation after 4 days, forming a mature pellicle by Day 7. Both experimental trials pictured yielded successful recapitulations. Row 3 shows a set of trials that incorporated both microbes that had been purchased and microbe that had been isolated from kombucha itself. Row 3 shows successful recapitulations that contained two different strains of <i>Lachancea fermentati</i> each isolated from kombucha samples, as well as a strain of and <i>Gluconacetobacter hansenii</i>. The cellulose pellicle produced in this set of trials is thick and has multiple carbon dioxide bubbles.   
 
<center><img src="https://static.igem.org/mediawiki/2016/d/d6/T--Austin_UTexas--OngoingRecapitulations.png" alt="Conjugation2" style="width:80%;"></center><figcaption><b>Figure 2:</b>Shows samples from a series of completed recapitulation trials. A negative control triplicate set contained only tea media and experienced no microbial growth after 7 days. The positive control was inoculated with 600 uL of home-brewed kombucha and possessed distinct pellicle formation after 4 days, forming a mature pellicle by Day 7. Both experimental trials pictured yielded successful recapitulations. Row 3 shows a set of trials that incorporated both microbes that had been purchased and microbe that had been isolated from kombucha itself. Row 3 shows successful recapitulations that contained two different strains of <i>Lachancea fermentati</i> each isolated from kombucha samples, as well as a strain of and <i>Gluconacetobacter hansenii</i>. The cellulose pellicle produced in this set of trials is thick and has multiple carbon dioxide bubbles.   
 
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[[File:T--Austin UTexas--oligotable.png|thumb|center|'''Table 2''': Description of oligonucleotides ordered from IDT and their purposes. All of these are PCR primers except for igem2016_KOM_EtOH_07, which is a gBlock containing the end of the PQQ-ADH with a Golden Gate type 3 suffix appended.|600px]]
 
[[File:T--Austin UTexas--oligotable.png|thumb|center|'''Table 2''': Description of oligonucleotides ordered from IDT and their purposes. All of these are PCR primers except for igem2016_KOM_EtOH_07, which is a gBlock containing the end of the PQQ-ADH with a Golden Gate type 3 suffix appended.|600px]]
 
[[File:T--Austin UTexas--bromothymolblue wkey.png|thumb|'''Figure 3''': YPD plates made with pH indicator bromothymol blue. Colonies are various strains of ''Lachancea fermentati'' isolated from kombucha in our lab. Carbon dioxide and ethanol form as products of fermentation. The carbon dioxide reacts with water to form carbonic acid, lowering the pH of the plate and changing the color of the pH indicator. More dramatic color changes should correlate to greater ethanol production, but this assay is limited in that a variety of metabolites unrelated to ethanol production could influence pH.|400px]]<html>
 
[[File:T--Austin UTexas--bromothymolblue wkey.png|thumb|'''Figure 3''': YPD plates made with pH indicator bromothymol blue. Colonies are various strains of ''Lachancea fermentati'' isolated from kombucha in our lab. Carbon dioxide and ethanol form as products of fermentation. The carbon dioxide reacts with water to form carbonic acid, lowering the pH of the plate and changing the color of the pH indicator. More dramatic color changes should correlate to greater ethanol production, but this assay is limited in that a variety of metabolites unrelated to ethanol production could influence pH.|400px]]<html>
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<h4>GOX Sequences as Putative Promoters</h4>
 
<h4>GOX Sequences as Putative Promoters</h4>
 
<p>Three endogenous upstream regions of loci on the <i>Gluconobacter oxydans</i>  chromosome were reported to show increased mRNA synthesis as pH decreased, were isolated and obtained, as seen in table 1.<sup>2</sup> Using Golden Gate assembly, these putative promoters have been placed on the Golden Gate entry vector pYTK001 for later use. By utilizing these pH-sensitive promoters with different reporters and transforming them into multiple organisms in kombucha, the visualization of the microbes and their location in kombucha would be possible.<sup>4</sup> This will serve as a stepping stone into further understanding how the microbiome of kombucha changes as it brews as well as determining organism concentration specific times during the brewing process.</p>
 
<p>Three endogenous upstream regions of loci on the <i>Gluconobacter oxydans</i>  chromosome were reported to show increased mRNA synthesis as pH decreased, were isolated and obtained, as seen in table 1.<sup>2</sup> Using Golden Gate assembly, these putative promoters have been placed on the Golden Gate entry vector pYTK001 for later use. By utilizing these pH-sensitive promoters with different reporters and transforming them into multiple organisms in kombucha, the visualization of the microbes and their location in kombucha would be possible.<sup>4</sup> This will serve as a stepping stone into further understanding how the microbiome of kombucha changes as it brews as well as determining organism concentration specific times during the brewing process.</p>
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<li>Nakayama, S.-I., and Watanabe, H. (1998) Identification of cpxR as a Positive Regulator Essential for Expression of the Shigella sonnei virF Gene. <i>Journal of Bacteriology 180</i>, 3522–3528.</li>
 
<li>Nakayama, S.-I., and Watanabe, H. (1998) Identification of cpxR as a Positive Regulator Essential for Expression of the Shigella sonnei virF Gene. <i>Journal of Bacteriology 180</i>, 3522–3528.</li>
 
<li>Nakayama, S.-I., and Watanabe, H. (1995) Involvement of cpxA, a Sensor of a Two-Component Regulatory System, in the pH-Dependent Regulation of Expression of Shigella sonnei virF Gene. <i>Journal of Bacteriology 177</i>, 5062–5069.</li>
 
<li>Nakayama, S.-I., and Watanabe, H. (1995) Involvement of cpxA, a Sensor of a Two-Component Regulatory System, in the pH-Dependent Regulation of Expression of Shigella sonnei virF Gene. <i>Journal of Bacteriology 177</i>, 5062–5069.</li>
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Revision as of 23:38, 18 October 2016

Austin_UTexas

Results


Click on one of the images below to learn more about our results!