Team:Johns Hopkins/Project/VitA

From 2011.igem.org

Revision as of 02:25, 25 September 2011 by Jyu43 (Talk | contribs)

VitaYeast - Johns Hopkins University, iGEM 2011

Vitamin A

beta-Carotene (Vitamin A) and other carotenoids are present in many plants and share a common metabolic precursor with critical compounds including chlorophyll, tocopherol (Vitamin E), phylloquinone (Vitamin K1), squalene, and other sterols. Humans cannot naturally produce beta-Carotene, but require it for color vision.

betacarotene beta-Carotene

Pathway

The Vitamin A production pathway template integrated into Saccharomyces cerevisiae was obtained from another strain of beta-Carotene-producing yeast, Xanthophyllomyces dendrorhous. S. cerevisiae has endogenous machinery to produce farnesyl diphosphate, but the rest of the pathway must be engineered. The missing caretenogenic genes included carotene desaturase, GGPP synthase, phytoene synthase. The pathway for Vitamin A production is as follows:

Beta-carotene schematic (1).jpg

Once the strains containing the missing genes were placed on expression cassettes, we verified beta-Carotene production using HPLC analysis. To make sure that the cells were indeed producing beta-Carotene, we tested its efficiency on a watered-down combination of dough, our intended final substrate, and agar. We characterized the yeast's beta-Carotene absorption over time both on YPD and dough media plates to observe the effects of the change of substrate on the beta-Carotene yield from the cells.

Sauer, M., Branduardi, P., Valli, M., & Porro, D. (2004). Production of L-ascorbic acid by metabolically engineered Saccharomyces cerevisiae and Zygosaccharomyces bailii. Applied and environmental microbiology, 70(10), 6086-91. doi: 10.1128/AEM.70.10.6086-6091.2004.

Experiments

Vitamin C concentration Assay (By Anne Marie Helmenstine, Ph.D)

1. Add 25.00 ml of vitamin C standard solution to a 125 ml Erlenmeyer flask.

2. Add 10 drops of 1% starch solution.

3. Rinse your buret with a small volume of the iodine solution and then fill it. Record the initial volume.

4. Titrate the solution until the endpoint is reached. This will be when you see the first sign of blue color that persists after 20 seconds of swirling the solution.

5. Record the final volume of iodine solution. The volume that was required is the starting volume minus the final volume.

6. Repeat the titration at least twice more. The results should agree within 0.1 ml.

7. You titrate samples exactly the same as you did your standard. Record the initial and final volume of iodine solution required to produce the color change at the endpoint.