Parts
Anderson Promoters
Relative Strength: weak (0.33) BBa_J23110
- Selected as a relatively weak promoter against which to compare the expression of the PETase construct
Relative Strength: moderate (0.58) BBa_J23111
- Selected as a relatively moderately strong promoter against which to compare the expression of the PETase construct
Relative Strength: strong (1) BBa_J23100
- Selected as a relatively strong promoter against which to compare the expression of the PETase construct
Tags
N-OsmY: Fusion proteins with an N-terminal osmY have been shown to successfully secrete proteins of interest out of E. Coli
C-Myc: This C-terminal tag would allow the PETase construct to be more easily detected by Western blot assays for expression
Others
PETase sequence: gene that coded for the PET hydrolase
Plasmid backbone: the pSB1C3 backbone is recommended
High efficiency E. Coli cells: hosted the PETase constructs
Parts Submitted
BBa_K1885001
- Gibson-assembled pSB1C3 with novel fusion osmY-PETase A0.??
BBa_K1885002
- Gibson-assembled pSB1C3 with novel fusion osmY-PETase A0.58
BBa_K1885005
- Gibson-assembled pSB1C3 with novel fusion osmY-PETase A0.33
Parts Description
This part increases the efficiency of the initial step in the bioremediation of PET: the production of metabolizable monomers (ethylene glycol and terephthalate) through hydrolysis. PETase catalyzes the hydrolysis PET into terephthalate and
Ethylene glycol monomers. The N-terminal osmY protein and its signal peptide are fused to PETase with serine-glycine peptides with repeating intervention, ultimately serving to secrete PETase out of the cell (reacting with PET in the cell's local environment). The Anderson promoters, with relative strengths that precede the fusion protein in the plasmid, serves to constitutively express the fusion PETase, enhancing the degradation of environmental PET. This part utilizes the pSB1C3 backbone and confers resistance to chloramphenicol.