Team:Imperial College London/Temporal Control
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Temporal Control
The figure above depicts temporal control in relation to Module 1, Module 2, and Module 3 with expected changes in OD, carbon source concentration, RFP and GFP (LINK TO ASSAYS/TESTING CONSTRUCTS).
In The E.ncapsulator, temporal control is an integral part of the design. The 3 modules can only perform their function successfully in the system if they have a temporal mechanism triggering them in a sequential manner. We have achieved this using 3 types of control:
- Chemical induction starts protein drug production.
- Autoinduction starts encapsulation.
- Thermoinduction starts genomic deletion.
Chemical induction
From the Module 1 genetic circuit, in the absence of IPTG in the system, the LacI repressor inhibits production of the protein of interest. When IPTG is added in we start the production of the drug of interest:
Autoinduction
The CRP glucose repressible promoter triggers the encapuslation phase.
- When levels of glucose in the medium are high, cAMP levels are low and encapsulation is repressed
- When the levels of glucose in the medium are low, cAMP levels are high and encapsulation is induced.
Starting the encapsulation and maintaining expression of colanic acid requires energy in the form of carbon sources. Bacteria use up a primary source to grow and trigger encapsulation. Glucose here is the primary source, which in unison with cAMP, is responsible for switching on the CRP promoter and the encapsulation process.A secondary carbon source is also needed to maintain the system once glucose is used up. This phenomenon of switching from a primary source to a secondary source is known as a diauxie.
This switching process occurs automatically, hence we have called it "autoinduction".
[link to more details]
Thermoinduction