Wuhan University (WHU)
After working really hard on convincing their university, this team managed to participate in the 2011 iGem competition with the supportment they seeked.
This team found inspiration in an exciting feature of a traditional chinese dance: “Face changing”. It’s a very rapid movement made by the dancer where she changes the mask she’s wearing. But it’s so fast that you have to pay attention to notice the exact change.
They showed us then the picture of a tree and how it changes with each season focusing on a point. This color-changing over time inspired an Oscillator.
A strain of E.coli that works as an oscillator and can yield different kinds of pigment periodically.
Another branch of this team’s project is the “E film”, they aim to build three E coli strains which can produce and secrete colours, the three primary colours, in the presence of different light wavelengths.
The key players of their gene circuit are LsrR and LsrK alternating their expression. At the beginning LsrR is expressed and inhibits LsrK. When concentration builds up, LsrR inhibits its own expression, eventually conentration drops and LsrK has a chance to express. Then, LsrK induces expression of LsrR and there we go again.
They talked about two methodologies, used when attempting to build their system:
a) Golden gate method
Some systems require too many biobricks in the assembly, which lead to tedious experimental process and increasing demand of time.
What they did was digest their Biobricks with Xbal and Pstl, then ligated them to ten “module plasmids” (Previously designed). They mixed these plasmids and an array plasmid in a single reaction and added a Bsal and ligase. By using BsaI theywe provided their biobricks with cohensive end
and in the same reaction, assembled them in order into the array plasmid. The array plasmid has lacZ flanked by Bsal recognition site, and under the effect of Bsal, it will be able to produce sticky ends complementary to the first and tenth module plasmids. This saved them days.
b) Reverse assembly
Facing thee need of one BioBrick that was in a composite they got from Edinburgh, they needed to break down these assembled BioBricks and their only chance was a costly (time and moneywise) PCR.
So what they think is, the backbone standard should include HindIII sites flanking BioBricks for their recovery.
After working really hard on convincing their university, this team managed to participate in the 2011 iGem competition with the supportment they seeked.
This team found inspiration in an exciting feature of a traditional chinese dance: “Face changing”. It’s a very rapid movement made by the dancer where she changes the mask she’s wearing. But it’s so fast that you have to pay attention to notice the exact change.
They showed us then the picture of a tree and how it changes with each season focusing on a point. This color-changing over time inspired an Oscillator.
A strain of E.coli that works as an oscillator and can yield different kinds of pigment periodically.
Another branch of this team’s project is the “E film”, they aim to build three E coli strains which can produce and secrete colours, the three primary colours, in the presence of different light wavelengths.
The key players of their gene circuit are LsrR and LsrK alternating their expression. At the beginning LsrR is expressed and inhibits LsrK. When concentration builds up, LsrR inhibits its own expression, eventually conentration drops and LsrK has a chance to express. Then, LsrK induces expression of LsrR and there we go again.
They talked about two methodologies, new standards they used when attempting to build their system:
a) Golden gate method
Some systems require too many biobricksin the assembly, which lead to tedious experimental process and increasing demand of time.
What they did was digest their Biobricks with Xbal and Pstl, then ligated them to ten “module plasmids” (Previously designed). They mixed these plasmids and an array plasmid in a single reaction and added a Bsal and ligase. By using BsaI theywe provided their biobricks with cohensive end
and in the same reaction, assembled them in order into the array plasmid. The array plasmid has lacZ flanked by Bsal recognition site, and under the effect of Bsal, it will be able to produce sticky ends complementary to the first and tenth module plasmids. This saved them days.
b) Reverse assembly
Facing thee need of one BioBrick that was in a composite they got from Edinburgh, they needed to break down these assembled BioBricks and their only chance was a costly (time and moneywise) PCR.
So what they think is, the backbone standard should include HindIII sites flanking BioBricks for their recovery.