Team:DTU Denmark/USERprogram
From 2009.igem.org
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<font size="4"><b>USER fusion primer design software</b></font><br><br> | <font size="4"><b>USER fusion primer design software</b></font><br><br> | ||
- | <font size="3"><b>PHUSER | + | <font size="3"><b>PHUSER: Primer Help for USER</b></font><br><br> |
<font size="3"><b>Abstract</b></font><br> | <font size="3"><b>Abstract</b></font><br> |
Revision as of 20:50, 20 October 2009
Home | The Team | The Project | Parts submitted | Modelling | Notebook |
The redoxilator - Introduction - Results - Applications and perspectives - Safety considerations The USERTM assembly standard - USERTM cloning USERTM fusion primer design software - Abstract - Instructions - Output format |
The project USER fusion primer design software PHUSER: Primer Help for USER Abstract When designing constructs with more than two biobricks using USER fusion, it is essential to avoid identical fusion tails to ensure correct order of the biobricks. Furthermore, the DNA denaturation temperature (TM) of the primer fragments must be pairwise within 2 oC degrees, for PCR amplication of the biobricks. Selection of optimal fusion tails is achieved by employing a simple, but powerful sorting algorithm utilizing the fact that the relative penalty for increasing length of, and shifting center of fusion regions, is the same, i.e. one base added/removed from final primers. Adjusting the TM of primer pairs is done by sampling the various allowed lengths of the primers (18-24 bases), thus changing the CG ration and affecting TM, until an acceptable solution is achieved. The suggested primers are presented in a clear and intuitive fashion, diplaying both list view and a graphical overview of fusion regions and related primers. The program is tested to handle primer design for constructs with between 2 and 9 biobricks at the time, but in theory, if enough unique fusion tails exists, many more biobricks can be fused in the same reaction. Article submitted October 2009 - publication pending Questions or comments? Please Email us Design your primers here |
Synthetic Biology “Synthetic Biology is an art of engineering new biological systems that don’t exist in nature.” -Paras Chopra & Akhil Kamma In nature, biological molecules work together in complex systems to serve purposes of the cell. In synthetic biology these molecules are used as individual functional units that are combined to form tailored systems exhibiting complex dynamical behaviour. From ‘design specifications’ generated from computational modelling, engineering-based approaches enables the construction of such new specified gene-regulatory networks. The ultimate goal of synthetic biology is to construct systems that gain new functions, and the perspectives of the technology are enormous. It has already been used in several medical projects2 and is predicted to play a major role in biotech-production and environmental aspects. |
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