MODELING:
Parameters to be defined:
Half-lives, Promoter efficiency, Dissociation rates and Initial concentrations
Missing Information:
- Average half-life of membrane proteins
- Average half-life of proteins with an LVA tail
- Average half-life of transcriptional factors
- Relative strength of the promoters and their efficiency
- Efficiency or reaction rate of the channels
- Efficiency of the repressors (cI, RcnR)
- Efficiency of the inducers (AHL:LuxR)
- Rate of complex formation ( AHL:LuxR)
Investigate enzymes average half-life:
Article: Arribas E., Muñoz-Lopez A., Garcia-Meseguer M.J., Lopez-Najera A., Avalos L., Garcia-Molina F., Garcia-Moreno M., Varon R., 2008. Mean Lifetime and First-Passage Time of the Enzyme Species Involved in an Enzyme Reaction. Application to Unstable Enzyme Systems. Bull. Math. Biol. 70: 1425–1449
HALF-LIVES:
- aiiA: The Imperial College iGEM site states that aiiA half-life is of 24 hours. The value of analogue proteins is determined in other articles.
- cI: cI has a half-life 40 minutes (Arkin, Ross, McAdams 1998). In another study, done in E. coli, cI is reported to have a half-life of 10 hours (Parsell, Silber & Sauer 1990), the amino acid sequence reported in that study is the same as the cI from the biopart we are using. In another study (Andersen et al 1998), they determined the effect of the LVA tail on a GFP. They designed constructions with different LVA tails attached to a mutant GFP with a half-life greater than one day. The addition of the LVA tail decreased the half-life to 40 minutes, which would equal to ~1/36 of the half-life of the wild type.
- LuxR: On Manefield et al. (2002), although a half-life isn’t directly measured there are some experiments in E. coli which suggest that LuxR half-life is greater than 45 minutes and lower than 90 minutes (figure 2ª). On the Imperial College’s iGEM webpage they defined it as 60 minutes.
- RcnA: Some important facts about RcnA that could help us calculate its half-life:
It has a length of 274 residues with 6 transmembrane domains, a mass of 32 kDa and a zone very rich in histidines (17 histidines, 3 aspartatates and 3 glutamates in a region of 26 amino acids). Source: Rodrigue, Effantin & Mandrand-Berthelot (2005). On page 1076 of the Lehninger there is a table, modified from Bachmair, Finley & Varshavsky (1986), which relates proteins half-life with its amino terminal residue.
PROMOTER EFFICIENCY:
- Pm (promoter repressed by cI): In Reinitz y Vaisnys (1990), they reported that the Gibbs free energy of the binding of E. coli’s polymerase to the promoter is -12.5kcal mol-1. They also reminded us that an association constant k, can formally be translated to Gibbs free energy through the following equation: k = exp(ΔG/RT), where R is the universal gas constant, T is the temperature in Kelvin degrees (310°K, equals to 37°C) and ΔG is the difference in the free energy of Gibbs between the bound and unbound states. They also report that the synthesis rate for cro under control of the Pm promoter is 4.7 x 10-9 mol/min (We still have to discuss if this could be linked with RcnA).
- p(AHL:LuxR): The maximum transcription rate of a sequence under control of the AHL:LuxR activator is reported as 1.4 x 10-2 ms-1, by Goryachev, Toh & Lee (2006).
DISSOCIATION RATE:
- cI: It seems that the dimerization of cI is important for its activation, therefore we are considering including it in the equations. According to Babic & Little (2007) cI slowly dimerizes. In Reinitz y Vaisnys (1990) dimeric cI dissociation rate is defined as 2.0 x 10-8 M.
Others:
Michaelis-Menten: Describes the kinetics of many enzymatic reactions. This model is only valid when the substrate concentration is much greater than that of the enzyme, and when the enzyme-substrate complex maintains a constant concentration.
* Implies law of mass action
For our equations first approach we gathered all their information in a document which included the name, kinetics, references and notes for each equation. |