Part:BBa_I750016:Design
Gas Vesicle polycistonic gene
- 10COMPATIBLE WITH RFC[10]
- 12COMPATIBLE WITH RFC[12]
- 21INCOMPATIBLE WITH RFC[21]Illegal BglII site found at 334
Illegal BamHI site found at 4139
Illegal XhoI site found at 3827 - 23COMPATIBLE WITH RFC[23]
- 25INCOMPATIBLE WITH RFC[25]Illegal NgoMIV site found at 785
Illegal NgoMIV site found at 1187
Illegal AgeI site found at 4106 - 1000INCOMPATIBLE WITH RFC[1000]Illegal SapI.rc site found at 2597
Illegal SapI.rc site found at 3753
Design Notes
Site directed mutagenesis was performed in four rounds to remove 3 PstI sites and one EcoRI site from gvpL in the sequence. Primers with biobrick prefix and suffix were then used in a PCR reaction to amplify the part. Finally BBa_J61035 was used to provide the plasmid backbone which introduced a RBS at the front of the part.
The part was sequenced and found to have 10 x 40bp repeat inserted into GvpL related to the mutagenic primer for the gvpL-g696a mutagenic primer. Surprisingly this does not appear to inhibit the operation of the system in bouyancy tests.
There are also a number of SNP in comparison to the referance sequence, presumably due to the error rate with pfuultra.
iGEM groningen 2009 has attempted to remove the 10x repeat and mutation in gvpL gene by replacing a part of the cluster with synthetic DNA. The repeat section is flanked by MvaI and XhoI restriction sites. These two sites are unique in the GVP cluster, but not in the plasmid backbone. By cutting out the cluster, and subsequent cutting of the cluster with MvaI and XhoI, the part with repeat can be removed and replaced by synthetic DNA. After ligation of the cluster, it can be placed back into a vector.
Modelling
The gas vesicles are shaped roughly like a cylinder with a cone at each end, whose cross-section we model as (based mostly on [http://2009.igem.org/Team:Groningen/Literature#Walsby1994| Walsby 1994]):
We assume the interior of the wall of the gas vesicle is similarly shaped to the exterior, just slightly smaller (the right-most part of the image above illustrates this situation for the left tip of the gas vesicle). This means the different dimensions are related through the equations below. To determine the total volume, just use them with the given width/diameter (at least for the dimensions given in [http://2009.igem.org/Team:Groningen/Literature#Walsby1994| Walsby 1994]). To determine the gas volume, use them with wgas and dgas.
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w = total width tw = thickness of wall (1.8-1.95nm) d = diameter a = 77 degrees ρgas = density of gas in vesicle (kg/m^3 = yg/nm^3) ρwall = density of vesicle wall (kg/m^3) wwt = tw/sin(a/2) wt = (1/2)*d/tan(a/2) wc = w - 2*wt Vc = (1/4)*pi*d^2*wc Vt = (1/12)*pi*d^2*wt V = Vc+2*Vt M = ρ*V wgas = w-2*wwt = width of gas space dgas = d-2*tw = diameter of gas space V = Vgas + Vwall |
Now we can consider the buoyant density of E. coli with gas vesicles. We have chosen to approach this problem using densities and volume ratios. According to [http://2009.igem.org/Team:Groningen/Literature#Baldwin1995| Baldwin 1995], [http://2009.igem.org/Team:Groningen/Literature#Bylund1991| Bylund 1991] and [http://2009.igem.org/Team:Groningen/Literature#Poole1977| Poole 1977], the density of (wild-type) E. coli is 1100 kg/m3 ±3% under wildly varying conditions. This makes our method easier than trying to directly compute the density of a single cell, due to the fact that the volume can differ wildly (both during the life cycle and from strain to strain) and a lack of concrete data on the number of gas vesicles produced (in E. coli). Note that the computations below assume that the gas vesicles simply add to the existing structures.
Loading graph...
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Vc = volume of a cell without gas vesicles Vv = volume of gas vesicles in cell Vcv = volume of a cell with gas vesicles (assumed to be Vc+Vv) ρc = density of a cell without gas vesicles ρv = density of gas vesicles ρm = density of medium The following has to be true if the cell floats: Vc*ρc + Vv*ρv < Vcv*ρm (Vcv-Vv)*ρc + Vv*ρv < Vcv*ρm ρc + (Vv/Vcv)*(ρv-ρc) < ρm Assume (ρv - ρc)<0 Vv/Vcv > (ρm - ρc)/(ρv - ρc) Vv/Vcv > 1 - (ρm - ρv)/(ρc - ρv) Explanation of the graph Four curves are shown, corresponding to how many gas vesicles a cell needs with "our" gas vesicles (unless you changed the constants in the calculator above), the gas vesicles documented in [http://2009.igem.org/Team:Groningen/Literature#Li1998|Li 1998]Using a width and diameter of 75nm and 50nm, respectively. Here we assume that their "width" should be interpreted as our diameter, as doing it the other way around would leave no room for a cylinder and they specifically mention that the vesicles appear to be shaped like cylinders with conical ends. i Using a width and diameter of 500nm and 84nm, respectively. i The X-axis depicts the cell density of the part of the cell not occupied by gas vesicles. The Y-axis depicts the minimum volume fraction of the cell that should consist of gas vesicles to make the cell float. |
Source
This 5.7Kbp part contains 11 open reading frames coding for gas vesicle genes (gvpB,R,N,F,G,L,S,K,J,T and U) from Bacillus megaterium VT1660 AF053765. The original DNA (sequence= AF053765) was provided by Maura Cannon in pBluescriptIIKS plasmid (pNL29 in "Gas Vesicle genes identified in Bacillus megaterium and Functional Expression in Escherichia coli", Ning Li and Maura C. Cannon, Jounal of bacteriology, May 1998 p2450-2458). Site dirrected mutagenesis was performed to produce four silent changes, removing restriction sites.
References
pNL29 in "Gas Vesicle genes identified in Bacillus megaterium and Functional Expression in Escherichia coli", Ning Li and Maura C. Cannon, Jounal of bacteriology, May 1998, p2450-2458