Team:Tsinghua/Project

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Background

Motile bacteria can respond to chemical gradients in their environment. Such directed movement in response to special chemicals is defined as chemotaxis. If organisms detect substances beneficial for surviving, positive chemotaxis occurs and cells will move in the direction of increasing concentration. In contrast, negative chemotaxis occurs when motile bacteria move away from a repellant. Both kinds of responses adjust the behaviors of organisms to the environment, thus improve their ability of surviving.

One typical chemotactic behavior is the response of Escherichia coli toward certain nutritions, which plays a key role in seeking food. Researchers have investigated thoroughly into the molecular mechanism of it.Motility in prokaryotes is accomplished by flagellum, a complex structure moving the cell by rotation, much like the propeller in a motor boat. In E.coli, counterclockwise rotation moves the cell in a direction called a run, while clockwise rotation results in tumbling of the cell.The direction of rotation is controlled by phosphorylation of CheY, a signaling protein in the chemotaxis pathway of E.coli. Low level of phosphorylation results in counterclockwise rotation of flagella and makes the cell move forward. In contrast, phosphorylated CheY favors tumbling. The level of protein phosphorylation is regulated by certain attractant or repellent, which can bind specific receptors on the cell surface. Signals are then passed through a series of intracellular biochemical reactions, in which phosphorylation of CheY is controlled. In this way bacteria accomplish chemotactic behavior.

Escherichia coli is a common kind of engineer bacteria, which is convenient for genetic manipulation. It is likely that we make use of the chemotactic pathway in E.coli, making them detect and move toward a special chemical substance, maybe a certain kind of pollutant. If the genetic engineering strain also has the ability of degrading aimed chemicals, efficiency of pollution treatment can be hopefully improved a lot. However, the natural ligands concerning chemotaxis in E.coli are limited in several kinds of nutrition, such as carbohydrate and amino acids. Strains that can detecting more kinds of organic substances and even heavy metal ions is planed to be got through the reconstruction of chemotaxis system.

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Overall project

This year we are trying to work at the motility of bacteria. E.coli senses some chemicals and moves toward or stays still, this behavior is called chemotaxis. Any modification of the pathway from the sensor to the motile apparatus will cause different chemotactic effcts.

Moreover,most of the biosensors today are designed for a specific target signal, and they can not substitute each other in most cases. By structural analysis we find that most receptors for the same type of ligands exhibit great similarity, both in sequence information and characteristics. Our project is designed for an "Interchangeable Biosensor". The strategy is almost trial and error, to find an appropriate pathway between chemical molecules and corresponding reactions. Signals other than chemicals are much harder to manipulate, and integrating all the signals seems even more challenging,we are trying to isolate the elements and standardize them.

Major inspiration of our idea comes from the Three Laws of Robotics(Isaac Asimov):

1. A robot may not injure a human being, or, through inaction, allow a human being to come to harm.

2. A robot must obey the orders given it by human beings except where such orders would conflict with the First Law.

3. A robot must protect its own existence as long as such protection does not conflict with the First or Second Law.

The goal is to be achieved via three different subproject.CdLocalizer, DualReceptor and TheoRiboSwitch.TheoRiboSwitch Project focuses on the verification of signals transmission between GCS and motor while DualReceptor Project focuses on the integration of multiple signals at the sensor and GCS sections. CdLocalizer Project is designed to illustrate a more complicated correlation other than linear correlation between ligand concentration and GCS.

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Wetlab Work

WetLab work

Simulation

Chemotaxis Modeling


Reference

1 Assessment of heavy metal bioavailability in contaminated sediments and soils using green fluorescent protein-based bacterial biosensors. Vivian Hsiu-Chuan Liao*, Ming-Te Chien, Yuen-Yi Tseng, Kun-Lin Ou. Environmental Pollution 142 (2006) 17e23

This literature helped us to introduce GFP into our project and gave us a description of heavy metal pollutants.

2 The C-terminal domain of the Escherichia coli RNA polymerase a subunit plays a role in the CI-dependent activation of the bacteriophage lambda pM promoter. Barbara Kedzierska , Anna Szambowska , Anna Herman-Antosiewicz , David J. Lee , Stephen J.W. Busby2, Grzegorz Wegrzyn1 and Mark S. Thomas3,* Nucleic Acids Research, 2007, Vol. 35, No. 7

This literature gives out a mechanism of CI-Pm promotor interaction.

3 Guiding Bacteria with Small Molecules and RNA.Shana Topp and Justin P. Gallivan. J. AM. CHEM. SOC. 2007, 129, 6807-6811 9

This literature lent us an overall vision of how bacteria movement happens and indicated out the central role of CheZ. It also introduced riboswitch into our project.

4 Luminescent bacterial sensor for cadmium and lead.Sisko Tauriainen, Matti Karp, Wei Chang, Marko Virta.Biosensors & Bioelectronics 13 (1998) 931–938

This literature descripted sensors for cadmium and lead.

5 Online and in situ monitoring of environmental pollutants: electrochemical biosensing of cadmium.I Biran, R Babai, K Levcov, J Rishpon, EZ Ron.Environmental Microbiology, 2000

This literature gives out a sensing and detecting method for cadmium.

6 Sensitivity of OR in Phage lambda.Audun Bakk, Ralf Metzler, and Kim Sneppen.Biophysical Journal Volume 86 January 2004 58–66

This literature explains the operation of operons in phage lambda.





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