Team:Hong Kong-CUHK/Project
From 2011.igem.org
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<li><a id="overview">Overview</a></li> | <li><a id="overview">Overview</a></li> | ||
<li><a id="background">Background</a></li> | <li><a id="background">Background</a></li> | ||
+ | <li><a id="previousrelatedprojects" class="background-2">Previous Related Projects</a></li> | ||
+ | <li><a id="entropy-mixing-battery" class="background-2">Entropy Mixing Battery</a></li> | ||
<li><a id="characterization">Characterization</a></li> | <li><a id="characterization">Characterization</a></li> | ||
<li><a id="lightcontrol">Light Control</a></li> | <li><a id="lightcontrol">Light Control</a></li> | ||
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+ | Previousrelated projects | ||
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+ | In 2010 iGEMcompetition, Queens-Canada team submited halorhodopsin from <em>H. salinarum</em> as biobricks and inserted thisgene to <em>C. elegans</em>. However, it wasnot well characterized. This year, we are trying to clone halorhdopsin from <em>N. pharaonis,</em> which has already beensuccessfully introduced and proved to perform complete light cycles in <em>E. coli, </em>to our biobrick system<sup>1</sup>. We aim to characterize the efficiency ofthis halorhodopsin to be a well-documented biobrick and a useful tool in <em>E. coli</em>. | ||
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+ | In previous iGEMprojects, various light sensors have been developed, including red light sensor(UT Austin, 2004), green light sensor (Tokyo-Nokogen, 2009) and blue lightsensor (University of Edinburgh, 2010). They are all light-induced fusiontranscription factors that trigger gene expression under the control ofspecific promoters, facilitating simply on/off switch and light-coupledcommunication. However, our design makes halorhodopsin not only a dynamic tunablelight sensor – by coupling with chloride sensitive promoters (e.g. P<sub>gad</sub>),but also an energy converter – by storing solar energy as osmolality potentialand further converted to electricity. Our project would provide a wilder scopeof applications from signal transduction and gene regulation to energygeneration. | ||
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+ | References | ||
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+ | 1. Hohenfeld, I. Purification of histidinetagged bacteriorhodopsin, pharaonis halorhodopsin and pharaonis sensoryrhodopsin II functionally expressed in Escherichia coli. <em>FEBS Letters</em> <strong>442</strong>,198-202(1999). | ||
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+ | <span style="font-weight: bold; ">Entropy-mixingbattery</span> | ||
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+ | <strong>1. Introductionof mechanism</strong> | ||
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+ | In the nature, the water cycle is drivenby solar energy. One part of the water cycle is that solar energy evaporateswater in the sea to become fresh water through inland precipitation. Fromanother point of view, during evaporation, the entropy of different ions in thesea, mainly sodium, chloride and potassium, decreases as ion concentration iselevated. It is a common phenomenon when high concentration solution of acertain solvent, such as sodium chloride, is diluted, the entropy of thesolvent increases and the energy is released as heat. Thus the ocean isactually a gigantic energy reservoir. Its energy is transformed from solarenergy and stored as salinity potential. When sea water mixes with fresh waterfrom river, massive amount of energy is released. | ||
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+ | Recently, some institutes are devotinggreat efforts to seek efficient methods of extracting energy released frommixing sea water and fresh water. Mixing-entropy battery is thus designed toconvert salinity potential to electricity<sup>1</sup>(Fig. 1). One pair of electrodes can specifically bind sodium ions or chlorideions, thus separating the charge when they are immersed in high salinitysolution, while decreasing the sodium chloride concentration in the solution.During this process, electrons in the cathode flow across electrical wires andreach the anode when there is complete electric circuit, since the immobilenegative charges (chloride) accumulating in the cathode repels electrons, whileimmobile positive charges (sodium) accumulating in the anode attract electrons.When the electrodes achieve equilibrium with the solution, there is no electriccurrent anymore. The next step is to immerse full-loaded electrodes in freshwater. Due to the salinity difference, sodium ions and chloride ions arereleased from the electrodes and those exceeded electrons in anode flow back tocathode to resume the original state. When the equilibrium is achieved, theelectrodes are re-immersed to high salinity water to start another cycle<sup>1</sup>. | ||
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+ | However thismethod only has high efficiency near estuaries. To solve this limitation, were-design this method using halorhodopsin-transformed <em>E. coli</em>. In our project, we fabricated the pair of electrodesaccording to W. Guo’s method<sup>2</sup> and withdrewcurrents from the battery. This is the first attempt to generate electricityfrom light energy by microorganism system in iGEM competition. | ||
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+ | References | ||
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+ | 1. La Mantia, F. et al.Batteries for Efficient Energy Extraction from a Water Salinity Difference. <em>Nanoletters</em> 0-3(2011).at <http://pubs.acs.org/doi/abs/10.1021/nl200500s> | ||
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+ | 2. Guo, W. et al. Energy Harvesting withSingle-Ion-Selective Nanopores: A Concentration-Gradient-Driven NanofluidicPower Source. <em>Advanced Functional Materials</em> <strong>20</strong>, 1339-1344(2010). | ||
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Revision as of 01:53, 4 October 2011
Project Description
Objectives
Our world is obviously facing several urgent problems in which energy crisis is definitely a major one. Nowadays, there are corresponding solutions to this problem. However, we find that the existing solutions are not satisfactory. There are solar panels to convert light energy into electricity, but it usually requires a large infrastructure. However, the efficiency of the conversion process is still not good enough. In order to improve the situation, our project targets at producing electricity more cheaply, more effectively and in a more portable way.
How can we achieve this?
We employ a light-driven ion pump in our project. By expressing the pump into our target bacterial strain, we can control the bacteria to pump in ions from the environment, and eventually produce a salinity difference. Also, we are going to manufacture a pair of specific electrodes. By making use of the electrodes, the salinity difference as well as our genetically engineered bacteria, we can generate electricity from the salinity difference which is produced by our genetically engineered bacteria in the presence of light. It is a brand new way to generate electricity.