Team:LCG-UNAM-Mexico:KZM
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* <h2>Insertion and translocation of T7 DNA at different times</h2> | * <h2>Insertion and translocation of T7 DNA at different times</h2> | ||
- | + | Entry of T7 DNA into the host cell occurs in several distinct stages. | |
<br>Phage's DNA is arranged in three classes of genes depending on their positions, it is translocated into the cell between 6 to 10 minutes after attachment, so this order and timing drives the phage's development. This phenomenon of DNA translocation is modeled here taking into account reported insertion speeds [REFERENCE]. | <br>Phage's DNA is arranged in three classes of genes depending on their positions, it is translocated into the cell between 6 to 10 minutes after attachment, so this order and timing drives the phage's development. This phenomenon of DNA translocation is modeled here taking into account reported insertion speeds [REFERENCE]. | ||
* <h2>Transcription of different T7 DNA segments into polycistronic mRNAs</h2> | * <h2>Transcription of different T7 DNA segments into polycistronic mRNAs</h2> | ||
- | + | It has been shown that T7 genes are expressed in overlapped polycistronic mRNAs. | |
<br>Transcription of T7 polycistronic mRNAs occurs if and only if its coding DNA segment is available in the cell. Transcription is dependent of the set of genes inserted at a time. | <br>Transcription of T7 polycistronic mRNAs occurs if and only if its coding DNA segment is available in the cell. Transcription is dependent of the set of genes inserted at a time. | ||
<br>We define a set of transcription rates for every polycistronic mRNA taking into account constant bacterial or T7 RNA polymerase elongation rates and the length of the polycistronic mRNA, these transcription rates will be our rate limiting steps at the transcriptional level. | <br>We define a set of transcription rates for every polycistronic mRNA taking into account constant bacterial or T7 RNA polymerase elongation rates and the length of the polycistronic mRNA, these transcription rates will be our rate limiting steps at the transcriptional level. | ||
* <h2>Transcription of kamikaze system</h2> | * <h2>Transcription of kamikaze system</h2> | ||
- | + | Expression of kamikaze system occurs when T7 RNA polymerase is present in the cell, this protein activates transcription through a T7 RNA pol promoter. | |
<br>Rate limiting step for this reaction is the elongation rate of T7 RNA polymerase, a translation rate for this polycistronic mRNA was constructed taking into account this limiting rate and the length of the produced messenger. | <br>Rate limiting step for this reaction is the elongation rate of T7 RNA polymerase, a translation rate for this polycistronic mRNA was constructed taking into account this limiting rate and the length of the produced messenger. | ||
<br>Kamikaze polycistronic mRNA codes for GFP, rRNAse domain of colicin E3(ColE3) and luxI. | <br>Kamikaze polycistronic mRNA codes for GFP, rRNAse domain of colicin E3(ColE3) and luxI. | ||
* <h2>Degradation of phage mRNAs</h2> | * <h2>Degradation of phage mRNAs</h2> | ||
- | + | We assume the same degradation rate for all T7 polycistronic mRNAs. Until now impact of this phenomenon had not been studied. It has been found that phage messengers are stabler than Bacterial mRNAs [REFERENCE]. | |
* <h2>Translation of phage mRNAs into proteins</h2> | * <h2>Translation of phage mRNAs into proteins</h2> | ||
- | + | In this model, translation is simulated assuming an environment of unlimited amino acids | |
<br>On the other hand, '''Quantity of ribosomes changes over time depending on the toxic action of ribosome-inactivating rRNAse domain of colicin E3.''' | <br>On the other hand, '''Quantity of ribosomes changes over time depending on the toxic action of ribosome-inactivating rRNAse domain of colicin E3.''' | ||
<br>We also assume that the elongation rate at which ribosomes incorporate amino acids is constant over all T7 mRNAs. | <br>We also assume that the elongation rate at which ribosomes incorporate amino acids is constant over all T7 mRNAs. | ||
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* <h2>Translation of kamikaze mRNA</h2> | * <h2>Translation of kamikaze mRNA</h2> | ||
- | + | Translation occurs as any other protein, its production decreases as a function the abundance of ribosomes and its translation rates. | |
* <h2>T7 DNA replication</h2> | * <h2>T7 DNA replication</h2> | ||
- | + | DNA synthesis is simulated by taking elongation of T7 DNA polymerase as the rate-limiting step. | |
<br>We assume an environment of limited free nucleotides so we can set a maximum number of T7 genomes produced in a single infection taking into account the size of the host genome (and this includes bacterial chromosomes, plasmids and other sources of free nucleotides). | <br>We assume an environment of limited free nucleotides so we can set a maximum number of T7 genomes produced in a single infection taking into account the size of the host genome (and this includes bacterial chromosomes, plasmids and other sources of free nucleotides). | ||
* <h2>Procapsid Assembly</h2> | * <h2>Procapsid Assembly</h2> | ||
- | + | This phenomenon is simulated in almost the same way as Drew Endy et al. 1996 using mass action kinetics. | |
* <h2>DNA packaging and final assembly</h2> | * <h2>DNA packaging and final assembly</h2> | ||
- | + | Both processes are modeled using mass action kinetics as well. This last step requires complete procapsids, T7 DNA, and enough of each structural protein to complete the phage. The simulation assumes that packaging of DNA into the procapsid is the rate-limiting step for T7 progeny formation. | |
* <h2>Sabotage: Inactivation and decay of ribosomes</h2> | * <h2>Sabotage: Inactivation and decay of ribosomes</h2> | ||
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* <h2>Simulation, performance and BSD construction</h2> | * <h2>Simulation, performance and BSD construction</h2> | ||
- | + | This is a single simulation of the performance of WTM, with this algorithm we can study the evolution and behavior of molecular species in time. | |
<br>For the purpose of our project we're particularly interested in the burst size an infected cell could produce in each infection process, as we said BSDs for WTM and KZM can be assembled with many runs of each model so we can compare the performance of our synthetic kamikaze system versus the wild-type at molecular and population levels. | <br>For the purpose of our project we're particularly interested in the burst size an infected cell could produce in each infection process, as we said BSDs for WTM and KZM can be assembled with many runs of each model so we can compare the performance of our synthetic kamikaze system versus the wild-type at molecular and population levels. | ||
<br>Generated BSDs are next used by Cellular Automaton to choose the burst size an infected cell (with and without our kamikaze system) is going to release into the medium. | <br>Generated BSDs are next used by Cellular Automaton to choose the burst size an infected cell (with and without our kamikaze system) is going to release into the medium. |
Revision as of 22:23, 19 October 2009