Part:BBa_K1092008:Design
ssDsbA-PDZ Domain-Voltage Switch
- 10COMPATIBLE WITH RFC[10]
- 12COMPATIBLE WITH RFC[12]
- 21COMPATIBLE WITH RFC[21]
- 23COMPATIBLE WITH RFC[23]
- 25INCOMPATIBLE WITH RFC[25]Illegal NgoMIV site found at 94
- 1000INCOMPATIBLE WITH RFC[1000]Illegal BsaI site found at 324
Design Notes
The Voltage Switch:
The voltage switch is a novel protein switch that responds to external voltage. The switch itself consist of the PDZ Ligand-Voltage sensor peptide (BBa_K1092007) and the PDZ Domain-Voltage sensor peptide (BBa_K1092008), and can be linked to different effectors such as the Dioxygenase (BBa_K1092002) and Laccase (BBa_K1092004), or the RFP fragments (BBa_K1092105 & BBa_K1092106). Initially, the two proteins would express and localize onto the inner membrane of the bacteria. The two peptides would then come together forming a dimer. After that, due to the mutual repulsion of the positive charges in the two voltage sensor peptide, the two voltage sensor peptide would separate. This separate the two effectors down below the two peptide, causing either a long distance for the two effectors to interact, or a longer distance of diffusion of substrates. This represent the OFF stage of the voltage switch, and it could be enhanced by using negatively charged environment to further pull them apart.
During the ON stage, the environment become positively charged, and this environment exert a strong electrostatic repulsion on the two voltage sensor peptide so that they can be pushed together by overcoming the mutual repulsion between the peptides. This action brings the two downstream effectors together, which either provides short-enough distance for them to interact, or greatly reduces the distance of diffusion of the substrates, thus greatly enhance the reaction rate.