Team:CU-Boulder

Put it in a Box

Bacterial microcompartments (BMCs) occur in nature to encapsulate enzymatic and metabolic processes in organisms such as E.coli. We have focused our work on the simplest BMC, the ethanolamine utilization compartment (EUT). Our goal is to engineer the an improved and simplified EUT that requires minimal genes and can assemble and disassemble by the introducing a non-natural amino acid into the outer shell protein.

Improving Ethanolamine Utilization Compartments

Previous iGEM teams have already taken advantage of the compartment formed by the EutSMNLK operon, but we have found that it is still possible to form a EUT compartment by expression of only the EutS gene. This EutS gene codes for a protein that forms the hexameric tiles which make up the EUT compartment shell and can associate with and encapsulate EutC1-19, a component of the EutC gene, and any proteins attached to it. The formation of these compartments will be visualized through this EutC tagged eGFP localization within the EutS compartments. Various levels of EutC-eGFP and EutS expression have led us to an optimal combination that allows the formation of at least one compartment per E.Coli cell with optimal fluorescence for visualization.

Controlling Ethanolamine Utilization Compartments

Previous research has shown successful changes in chaperonin conformation by crosslinking cysteine residues with a light activated azobenzene - dimaleimide. At 450 nm azo-benzene will primarily be in its longer trans state but when exposed to 365 nm light, azo-benzene has a pinched cis conformation. This previous research demonstrated that taking advantage of these two conformations can be used to "close" and "open" a chaperonin. Towards the same end, we will be replacing amino acids within the EutS structure with azo-phenylalanine, a similar 'azobenzene' chemical structure linked to a phenylalanine amino acid, to create steric hindrance caused by cis to trans isomerization. If placed correctly in the EutS protein, this azobenzene containing residue could be used to prevent or allow the formation of EutS compartments.

Successful microscopy has confirmed the viability of EutS and EutC-eGFP in E.Coli, as shown below, but the laser used to excite eGFP may also cause conformational change of azo-phenylalanine. In the future we hope to use a fluorescent protein in the far-red spectrum to visualize the formation and destruction of EutS microcompartments. Our future work will focus on the implementation of a multiconstruct system with EutS, EutC1-19 with a new far-red fluorophore, and a third construct that creates tRNA’s to integrate azobenzene into the EutS at locations we expect to see just the right level of steric hindrance.