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- | <td height="88" colspan="2" bgcolor="#03438A" class="STYLE9"><p><strong>Site-specific recombination</strong><br /> | + | <td height="88" colspan="2" bgcolor="#03438A" class="STYLE9"><p><span class="STYLE5"><strong>Site-specific recombination</strong><br /> |
- | Site-specific recombination differs from general recombination in that short specific sequences which are required for the recombination, are the only sites at which recombination occurs. These reactions invariably require specialized proteins to recognize these sites and to catalyze the recombination reaction at these sites.</p></td> | + | Site-specific recombination differs from general recombination in that short specific sequences which are required for the recombination, are the only sites at which recombination occurs. These reactions invariably require specialized proteins to recognize these sites and to catalyze the recombination reaction at these sites.</span></p></td> |
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- | <td width="510" bgcolor="#03438A" class="STYLE9"><p><span class="STYLE10"><strong>Inverted repeats</strong> <br /> | + | <td width="510" bgcolor="#03438A" class="STYLE9"><p class="STYLE5"><span class="STYLE10"><strong>Inverted repeats</strong> <br /> |
If the two sites at which recombination will take place are oriented oppositely to one another in the same DNA molecule then the following illustrates the sequence of events that will take place:</span></p></td> | If the two sites at which recombination will take place are oriented oppositely to one another in the same DNA molecule then the following illustrates the sequence of events that will take place:</span></p></td> | ||
- | <td width="444" bgcolor="#03438A" class="STYLE9"><p><span class="STYLE10"><strong>Direct repeats</strong> <br /> | + | <td width="444" bgcolor="#03438A" class="STYLE9"><p class="STYLE5"><span class="STYLE10"><strong>Direct repeats</strong> <br /> |
If the two sites at which recombination will take place are oriented in the same direction in the same DNA molecule then the following illustrates the sequence of events:</span></p></td> | If the two sites at which recombination will take place are oriented in the same direction in the same DNA molecule then the following illustrates the sequence of events:</span></p></td> | ||
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- | <td height="118" bgcolor="#03438A" class="STYLE9"><p class=" | + | <td height="118" bgcolor="#03438A" class="STYLE9"><p class="STYLE11">The net result is that <strong>the segment of DNA between the two recombinogenic sites has inverted</strong> with respect to the rest of the DNA molecule.<br /> |
In other words, <strong><u>recombination at inverted repeats causes an inversion</u></strong></p></td> | In other words, <strong><u>recombination at inverted repeats causes an inversion</u></strong></p></td> | ||
- | <td bgcolor="#03438A" class="STYLE9"><p class=" | + | <td bgcolor="#03438A" class="STYLE9"><p class="STYLE11">The net result is that <strong>the segment of DNA between the two recombinogenic sites has been deleted</strong> from the rest of the DNA molecule and appears as a circular molecule.<br /> |
In other words, <strong><u>recombination at direct repeats causes a deletion</u></strong>.</p></td> | In other words, <strong><u>recombination at direct repeats causes a deletion</u></strong>.</p></td> | ||
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- | <td height="54" colspan="2" bgcolor="#03438A" class="STYLE9"><p><span class="STYLE10"><strong>Note</strong> that the reverse reaction -- the recombination of a circular molecule with another DNA molecule (either circular or linear), brings about a fusion of both molecules or the integration of one molecule into the other. The integrated segment will be flanked by directly repeating sequences which can, of course, be used to excise the integrated segment again.</span></p></td> | + | <td height="54" colspan="2" bgcolor="#03438A" class="STYLE9"><p class="STYLE5"><span class="STYLE10"><strong>Note</strong> that the reverse reaction -- the recombination of a circular molecule with another DNA molecule (either circular or linear), brings about a fusion of both molecules or the integration of one molecule into the other. The integrated segment will be flanked by directly repeating sequences which can, of course, be used to excise the integrated segment again.</span></p></td> |
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- | <td height="54" colspan="2" bgcolor="#03438A"><p class=" | + | <td height="54" colspan="2" bgcolor="#03438A"><p class="STYLE11"> <span class="STYLE9">In order for the lambda prophage to exist in a host <em>E. coli</em> cell, it must integrate into the host chromosome which it does by means of a <strong>site-specific recombination reaction</strong>. </span><br /> |
</p> </td> | </p> </td> | ||
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<td height="55" bgcolor="#03438A"><img src="https://static.igem.org/mediawiki/2008/3/30/消费税.jpg" width="510" height="320" /></td> | <td height="55" bgcolor="#03438A"><img src="https://static.igem.org/mediawiki/2008/3/30/消费税.jpg" width="510" height="320" /></td> | ||
- | <td height="55" bgcolor="#03438A"><p class=" | + | <td height="55" bgcolor="#03438A"><p class="STYLE15">The <em>E. coli</em> chromosome contains one <strong>attachment site</strong> which is designated <strong><em>attB</em></strong>. The site is only 30 bp in size and contains a conserved central 15 bp region where the recombination reaction will take place. The structure of the recombination site is usually represented as <strong>BOB'</strong>.</p> |
- | <p class=" | + | <p class="STYLE15">The bacteriophage recombination site - <strong><em>attP</em></strong> - contains the identical central 15 bp region as <strong><em>attB</em></strong>. The overall structure can be represented as <strong>POP'</strong>.</p> |
- | <p class=" | + | <p class="STYLE15">Integration of bacteriophage lambda requires one phage-encoded protein - <strong>Int</strong>, which is the <strong>integrase</strong> - and one bacterial protein - <strong>IHF</strong>, which is <strong>Integration</strong> <strong>Host</strong> <strong>Factor</strong>. Both of these proteins bind to sites on the <strong>P</strong> and <strong>P'</strong> arms of <strong><em>attP</em></strong> to form a complex in which the central conserved 15 bp elements of <strong><em>attP</em></strong> and <strong><em>attB</em></strong> are properly aligned. </p></td> |
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- | <td height="23" colspan="2" bgcolor="#03438A" class="STYLE11"><p class="STYLE11 STYLE4">The result of recombination is that the integrated prophage is flanked by two attachment sites but now they are slightly different: <em>attL</em> has the structure BOP' and <em>attR</em> has the structure POB'. </p></td> | + | <td height="23" colspan="2" bgcolor="#03438A" class="STYLE11"><p class="STYLE11 STYLE4 STYLE23 STYLE5">The result of recombination is that the integrated prophage is flanked by two attachment sites but now they are slightly different: <em>attL</em> has the structure BOP' and <em>attR</em> has the structure POB'. </p></td> |
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- | <td height="23" colspan="2" bgcolor="#03438A" class=" | + | <td height="23" colspan="2" bgcolor="#03438A" class="STYLE24"><p class="STYLE4">Cre-Lox recombination is a special type of site-specific recombination, which is often applied as a gene knockout tool. <br /> |
Cre is a site-specific DNA recombinase, which can catalyse the recombination of DNA between specific sites, e.g. loxP in a DNA molecule. When cells that have loxP sites in their genome express Cre, a reciprocal recombination event will occur between the loxP sites. The double stranded DNA is cut at both loxP sites by the Cre protein. The strands are then rejoined with <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/DNA_ligase" title="DNA ligase">DNA ligase</a>. The efficiency of recombination depends on the orientation of the loxP sites. For two lox sites on the same chromosome arm, inverted loxP sites will cause an inversion, while a direct repeat of loxP sites will cause a deletion event.</p> | Cre is a site-specific DNA recombinase, which can catalyse the recombination of DNA between specific sites, e.g. loxP in a DNA molecule. When cells that have loxP sites in their genome express Cre, a reciprocal recombination event will occur between the loxP sites. The double stranded DNA is cut at both loxP sites by the Cre protein. The strands are then rejoined with <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/DNA_ligase" title="DNA ligase">DNA ligase</a>. The efficiency of recombination depends on the orientation of the loxP sites. For two lox sites on the same chromosome arm, inverted loxP sites will cause an inversion, while a direct repeat of loxP sites will cause a deletion event.</p> | ||
- | <p class=" | + | <p class="STYLE4"> Lox P site<br /> |
Lox P (locus of X-over P1) is a site on the Bacteriophage P1 consisting of 34 bp. There exists an asymmetric 8 bp sequence in between with two sets of palindromic, 13 bp sequences flanking it. The detailed structure is given below.</p></td> | Lox P (locus of X-over P1) is a site on the Bacteriophage P1 consisting of 34 bp. There exists an asymmetric 8 bp sequence in between with two sets of palindromic, 13 bp sequences flanking it. The detailed structure is given below.</p></td> | ||
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- | <td height="23" colspan="2" bgcolor="#03438A" class="STYLE1"><strong>Objectives</strong>: Bacterial assembly is aimed to be achieved based on the mechanism of site-specific recombination systems, So that the expensive reagent as well as the laboring tasks could be saved in gene cloning experiments.</td> | + | <td height="23" colspan="2" bgcolor="#03438A" class="STYLE1"><span class="STYLE5"><strong>Objectives</strong>: Bacterial assembly is aimed to be achieved based on the mechanism of site-specific recombination systems, So that the expensive reagent as well as the laboring tasks could be saved in gene cloning experiments.</span></td> |
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- | <td height="23" colspan="2" bgcolor="#03438A" class="subHeader STYLE5"><p class=" | + | <td height="23" colspan="2" bgcolor="#03438A" class="subHeader STYLE5"><p class="STYLE25">Background<br /> |
- | + | There is no mono-culture in nature! And in industry, coculture of species/strains are widely used to either improve productivity or lower the cost. The manufacturing of Vitamin C in China, which has contributed to 60 percent of its world production, could serve as an excellent example to validate the significance of coculture in industry. Thus to understand the interactions between coexistent ecosystems will not only contribute to human’s perception of nature but also to human practices in engineering.</p> | |
- | <p class=" | + | <p class="STYLE25">The attempts to uncover the mechanics and complex interrelations within natural microbial systems and quantitatively measurement of environmental factors on system behavior often failed because of the entangled intrinsic parameters and un-measurable population dynamics.</p> |
- | <p class=" | + | <p class="STYLE25">We designed and constructed an ecosystem constituted of two strains of E.coli, which could represent various biological relationships along with the fluctuation of antibiotics concentration as the environmental pressure and the inducing molecular such as IPTG and arobinose as the regulating factors. </p></td> |
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Revision as of 12:07, 28 October 2008
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This idea was inspired by the theory of Prisoner’s Dilemma. As in prisoners’ dilemma, the bacteria in our design are faced with two solutions for coexistence, they could either choose to cooperate with one another by providing inducers to express their partners’ antibiotics-resistance genes or they could take a foe strategy in which no cooperation is needed for both strains’ survival. |
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