From 2009.igem.org
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Revision as of 21:12, 19 October 2009
Untitled Document
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BioBricks without Borders:
Investigating a multi-host BioBrick vector and secretion of cellular products
The aim of the Utah State University iGEM project is to develop improved upstream and downstream processing strategies for manufacturing cellular products using the standardized BioBrick system. First, we altered the broad-host range vector pRL1383a to comply with BioBrick standards and enable use of BioBrick constructs in organisms like Pseudomonas putida, Rhodobacter sphaeroides, and Synechocystis PCC6803. This vector will facilitate exploitation of advantageous characteristics of these organisms, such as photosynthetic carbon assimilation. Following expression, product recovery poses a difficult and expensive challenge. Downstream processing of cellular compounds, like polyhydroxyalkanoates (PHAs), commonly represents more than half of the total production expense. To counter this problem, secretion-promoting BioBrick devices were constructed through genetic fusion of signal peptides with protein-coding regions. To demonstrate this, the secretion of PHA granule-associated proteins and their affinity to PHA was investigated. Project success will facilitate expression and recovery of BioBrick-coded products in multiple organisms.
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Introduction
- introduction to the usu project. give more details. you can break things down further and give some more detail than the abstract, but not yet full on lit review.
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Broad-Host Vectors
- introduction to broad-host range vectors - what the problem is (related to biobrick use in e. coli, what BHR's are, why we care.
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Protein Secretion
- introduction to broad-host range vectors - what the problem is (related to biobrick use in e. coli, what BHR's are, why we care.
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