Team:Cambridge/Project

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Project

Abstract

The Parts Registry's repertoire of input-sensitive devices is incredibly varied. Teams have engineered E. coli to be sensitive to a wide range of environmentally significant compounds, including arsenic, mercury, lead, cyanide, BTEX chemicals, copper, etc. Commonly used outputs include fluorescence, pH, and electrical conductance. The Cambridge 2009 team explored an alternative, simpler output mechanism - the production of pigment.

Project Details

Design

The Product

Our product reports the concentration of an inducer by colour:

Cambridge prototype2.jpg

Each well on the palette contains a different bacterial strain, which produces pigment only when the inducer is above a specific concentration. Thus, the top well turns brown at very high inducer concentrations, while the red well is the first to be activated by the very lowest concentrations of an inducer. The orange pigment in the bottom well is constitutively expressed to show that the bacteria are alive so the product is functional.

The Genetically Engineered Machine

Each bacterial strain is a machine built from a three part system:

Cambridge newGenericdevic.jpg

  • Sensor: Our sensor system is sensitive to different concentrations of an inducer.
  • Threshold device: The threshold device is responsible for the sensitivity to the inducer, and acts as an "on" switch to activate pigment production once the inducer has reached a threshold.
  • Colour: Pigment production.

Components

The three part system can be described by the system diagram below:

Cambridge systemdiagram.jpg

  • Sensor: Our project was output-focused, so we concentrated on the second two parts. For our proof of concept we used an arabinose sensitive promoter as the sensor. Future extensions of our project would include using our device with other input-sensitive promoters in the registry.
  • Threshold Device: This construct is based on

Experiments

Results

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