Team:Imperial College London/M1/Genetic

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(Module 1: Enzyme Production)
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<td width="20%"><center><a href="https://2009.igem.org/Team:Imperial_College_London/M1/PeptideDelivery"><b>Peptide Delivery</b></a></center></td>
<td width="20%"><center><a href="https://2009.igem.org/Team:Imperial_College_London/M1/PeptideDelivery"><b>Peptide Delivery</b></a></center></td>
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<td width="20%"><center><a href="https://2009.igem.org/Team:Imperial_College_London/Temporal_Control/M2/Wetlab"><b>WetLab</b></a></center></td>
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<td width="20%"><center><a href="https://2009.igem.org/Team:Imperial_College_London/Temporal_Control/M2/Wetlab"><b>Wet Lab</b></a></center></td>
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Revision as of 11:54, 12 October 2009

M1 Genetic Circuit

M1gci.jpg


This is the genetic circuit responsible protein drug fabrication (Module 1).

LacI is produced constitutively by the E. coli bacterium, and it represses the pLambda promoter. This inhibits production of the proteins of interest (PAH and cellulase).

To start the drug manufacturing process, IPTG is pipetted into the system. IPTG will repress LacI. As a result, protein production is de-repressed. Then, the enzymes PAH or cellulase will be produced by the E.ncapsulator.


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