Team:Peking S/project/wire

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(Introduction to ‘Chemical Wire’ toolbox)
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[https://2011.igem.org/Team:Peking_S/project/wire/harvest      learn more]
[https://2011.igem.org/Team:Peking_S/project/wire/harvest      learn more]
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[https://2011.igem.org/Team:Peking_S/project/wire/inverter      learn more]
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[https://2011.igem.org/Team:Peking_S/project/wire/matrix    learn more]
[https://2011.igem.org/Team:Peking_S/project/wire/matrix    learn more]

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Chemical Wire Toolbox


Introduction|Harvesting ‘Chemical Wires’ From Nature|Synthesizing Quorum Sensing Inverters|Orthogonal Activating Matrix


Introduction to ‘Chemical Wire’ toolbox


Cell-cell communication-based multicellular networks provide an extended vista for synthetic biology. By compartmentalizing complex genetic circuits into separate engineered cells, the difficulty of the construction by layering elementary gates can be dramatically reduced, partly due to the insulation of crosstalk between modules, the suppression of noise by populationally averaging, and the reducing of metabolic burden in host cells. What’s more, cell-cell communication-based multicellular feature enables coordination and synchronization among cells in and between populations and facilitates the generation of reliable non-Boolean dynamics.


However, orthogonal ‘chemical wires’ that allow concurrent communication are far from sufficient, making developing a versatile ‘chemical wire’ toolbox for conducting a complex gene network more necessary. This year we are aiming to develop a ‘chemical wire’ toolbox, applicable for both Boolean and Non-Boolean gene networks.


As natural quorum sensing systems provide an excellent pool for developing ‘chemical wire’ toolbox, harvesting ‘chemical wires’ from the nature is a fast and affordable way. We selected and evaluated a recently reported quorum sensing system, CinI-CinR system from Rhizobium leguminosarum a candidate of our toolbox. An artificial QS system, PchAB-NahR system exploiting salicylate as signaling molecule was also built. Both of them were proved to owe promising performance.

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On the other hand, all of the quorum sensing systems currently exploited in synthetic biology exhibit transcriptional activation, which cannot provide negative feed back loops during cell-cell communication, and the conventional switch that produces a negative feed back, which was implemented by the repressor-operator pairs, has evident defects. We have developed a ‘from ground up’ approach to synthesize direct, fast and reliable signaling inverters for synthetic microbial consortia, harnessing the conditioned binding of quorum sensing regulators to their cognate DNA boxes to control the accessibility of RNA polymerase.

NN10.png

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With candidates harvested from nature or re-designed from the natural counterpart, we started to characterize them, specially focusing on their orthogonality, dose response, time dependence (signaling speed) and their ability to coordinate cell population.

SignalingOrthogonal.png

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