LacI Inducible System
In this system, the lac repressor (LacI) is controlled by a strong constitutive promoter, and is upstream of mtrB under the control of pLac, a LacI regulated promoter. In the default state, LacI is expressed, and inhibits transcription at pLac. This should allow us to control the expression of mtrB. In the default state, mtrB is not expressed. IPTG (an analog of allolactose) induces mtrB expression by binding to LacI, thereby preventing it from inhibiting transcription at pLac.
BBa_K098984 with BioBrick Prefix and Suffix, an example of the circuity we engineered. BBa_K098983 is similar, with a weaker promoter driving lacI expression.
Induction Test for LacI System with GFP
In preparing to make the lacI system for mtrB, we tested the IPTG inducibility of [http://partsregistry.org/wiki/index.php?title=Part:BBa_K098982 BBa_K098982] in E. coli. In this system, the repressor is driven by a weak promoter.
Method
Our test method is diagrammed below.
Results
Induction of GFP expression was observed at both 2 and 4 hours after adding IPTG. Levels of GFP expression in uninduced samples, however, remained relatively the same throughout the 4 hours. Meanwhile, IPTG induction was not observed in either the negative control ([http://partsregistry.org/wiki/index.php?title=Part:BBa_K098981 BBa_K098981]) or the constitutive GFP control ([http://partsregistry.org/wiki/index.php?title=Part:BBa_K098991 BBa_K098991]). Note that in the graph below, it appears that such an induction method is not reliable at 6 hours.
IPTG successfully induces higher levels of GFP expression in cells containing [http://partsregistry.org/wiki/index.php?title=Part:BBa_K098982 BBa_K098982] This data is also available in PDF format.
Additionally, it appears that even the uninduced state of such a system has significant expression of GFP. Tighter control may require higher levels of lacI expression. This leakiness may explain the difficulty we had in cloning mtrB (a gene toxic to E. coli).
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