Team:BrownTwo/Implementation/yeast

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Saccharomyces cerevisiae

Yeast is a well-characterized and relatively simple eukaryotic model organism, and it provides a number of advantages as a chassis for synthetic biology and our project in particular.

Transcriptional modularity

Many transcriptional regulation pathways have been characterized in yeast, and some have been shown to work in a modular fashion. Thus, we can utilize a library of recombinant factors that each utilize the same control mechanism while binding specifically to different operator sites. In this way, each element of our system can operate in a similar fashion while having a distinct role

Genomic integration

In yeast, it is a straightforward procedure to integrate assembled constructs directly into the genome via homologous recombination. In contrast to transformation with plasmid DNA, this approach Multiple fragments can be inserted at distinct genetic loci ===Homology to Mammalian Due to the extensive compartmentalization seen in eukaryotic cells, transcription and translation occur within different locations of the cell. Transcription of precursor mRNA molecules takes places inside the nucleus. Additional modifications are made to the precursor mRNA before it leaves the nucleus, one of the most noteworthy being the splicing of introns or non-coding regions from the mRNA. It is the absence of a comparable system of modifications in prokaryotes that provides the first barrier to cloning many mammalian proteins in E. coli. By nature of their physical separation, the two processes are also distinguished by a temporal independence of one another, Kozak sequence 5' cap of mRNA required for initiation of translation in eukaryotes This is analogous to the RBS region in prokaryotes