Team:Berkeley Wetlab/Project Overview

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What is Cell Surface Display?

Schematic.jpg

cell surface display drawing

Cell surface display is a system for exposing proteins/peptides to the extracellular environment by anchoring them to the outermembrane of a cell. This is done by fusing a protein or peptide of interest to a protein domain that naturally inserts itself into the outer membrane. Genetic devices for cell surface display are generally composed of three basic components:

  1. Passenger domain: the protein or peptide exposed to the extracellular environment. Typically passengers are proteins/peptides that would not naturally reside on the outermembrane of E.coli, but are put there by a cell surface display device.
  2. Displayer domain: the domain that anchors the passenger to the outer membrane.
  3. Structural Spacer Element: a link between the passenger and the displayer.

The Problem

Certain functions cannot be engineered into E. coli without a cell surface display system. However, success in building a functional cell surface display system currently relies on a trial and error approach that is not guided by design principles. While it is almost certain that for a given passenger, a combination of displayer and structural spacers exists that leads to functional display, it is not clear what this combination is or how to chose such a combination rationally.

Our Goal

To create basic design principles for cell surface display which can serve as guidelines for future iGEM teams (and others) attempting to build systems that involve cell surface display.

Our Approach

Our Passengers

Passengers are the functional units of cell surface display devices. We chose to examine passengers that would be essential to display for bacterial systems of interesting application. We also chose passengers whose functional display could be assayed in vivo and high throughput. To read more about the passengers we used and our success in dispalying them, visit our parts page.

Displayers

Displayers are the segments of a cell surface display device that anchors a Passenger to the outer membrane of E.coli. Displayers can be divided into two classes, N terminal and C terminal, based on which terminus of the displayer its passenger is fused to. We built cell surface display systems using many different displayers. Most of them were autotransporters, proteins that form a pore in the outermembrane and then pull their N terminus through this pore, but many were common outermembrane proteins that have exposed extracellular termini. To read more about the displayers we used, visit our parts page.

Spacers

Structural spacer regions are common in natural display systems. However, their function is unclear, so most people engineer cell surface display devices without spacer regions. We decided to examine the effect that spacer elements have on engineered cell surface display devices. To read more about the spacer parts we built visit our parts page.