Team:Uppsala-Sweden/Project

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Contents

Overall project

Main Project

Regulation of gene expression by light is a milestone in synthetic biology. This rapidly developing field has attracted lots of attention in the recent years. Light regulation introduces noninvasive, direct and advanced spatiotemporal control of engineered biological systems. The aim of this project is a continuation of developing the above mentioned regulation method.

In 2005, the world’s first light-sensing bacteria, “coliroids”, were engineered by scientists at UT Austin. Since then, as more and more naturally occurring light-sensing microorganisms are being discovered and sequenced, synthetic biologists realize there is a whole range of natural light-sensing systems at their disposal. Most of the light-sensing systems developed thus far focus on studying one light-sensing system at a time, characterizing its activation light spectra, active state, etc. There has been a lack of focus on building light-sensing systems that sense multiple wavelengths, until very recently. The ultimate objective is to introduce control of gene expression with multiple light wavelengths and demonstrate multidimensional light control as well as fine tunability of this system by making the engineered bacteria exhibit image based on three basic colors.


sub project 1

“iGERM, the motion picture” Since biological processes are time dependent, we can take the time aspect into the bacterial picture. For instance, all of the products from light sensing will eventually degrade. A picture successfully imprinted onto a cell culture will not stay there forever. If we allowed timed control of the images by constantly changing the lighting conditions, we can make the picture change, like frames in a video camera. The ideal result is light induction of bacterial cultures ending up growing a video sequence. Hence, “pictures” become “motion pictures”. As a side quest, the motion picture doesn’t have to be as advanced or colorful as our attempt in the main project. The motion picture could be of one color only and cartoon-like. Furthermore, since time aspect becomes crucial, there are new requirements for the photosensors and effectors. The motion picture can be expressed in other vector than the vector used in the main project, with a complete new set of photosensing system and properties. Eukaryotic phytochromes, for example, react much faster than prokaryotic photosensing systems (reference). Coupled with fast-degrading effector molecules, the expression of our “motion picture system” should be much more dynamic than the three-color sensing system. Aim: create a photosensing system able to express images as motion pictures with fast response. Critical: create the time delay between the light induction (“recording”) and effector response (“playing”). Comments: no need for many colors, one is enough. The system could be radically different than the three-color-system. What about eukaryotic vectors instead of prokaryotic? The induction could even be based on protein-protein interaction and omit the interactions on transcriptional level completely. Transcription usually takes much longer time for anything to occur, something not in line with the rapidly changing motion picture.

Project Details

Part 2

The Experiments

Part 3

Results