Part:BBa_K2009666
sfGFP1-10 with promoter and RBS
Squence And Features
- 10COMPATIBLE WITH RFC[10]
- 12INCOMPATIBLE WITH RFC[12]Illegal NheI site found at 7
Illegal NheI site found at 30 - 21COMPATIBLE WITH RFC[21]
- 23COMPATIBLE WITH RFC[23]
- 25COMPATIBLE WITH RFC[25]
- 1000INCOMPATIBLE WITH RFC[1000]Illegal SapI.rc site found at 77
Introduction
sfGFP1-10——PSB1A3 length: 706bp
Derived from: PCR from Part:
BBa_I746916
,Cambridge 2008
BBa_J23100
: promoter:
BBa_B0030
: RBS
sfGFP1-10——PSB1A3 is an expression plasmid which insertsfGFP1-10 into PSB1A3.
PSB1A3 is a high copy numberplasmid carrying ampicillin resistance. The replication origin is aPUC19-derived pMB1.
SfGFP1-10 is a part of GFP(from 1bp to 214bp), GFP has been mutated to improve its solubilityand self-associating activity. When it express, it will emit green fluorescenceslightly under the fluorescence microscope.
We try to find anideal protein tag to be work both invivo and invitro and it can provide a sensitive measurable signalwhich don’t need external chemical reagents or substrates. Finally we find away to accomplish this goal—— dividing GFP into sfGFP1-10and sfGFP11. Either the sfGFP1-10 or sfGFP11 will emit green fluorescence slightly under the fluorescencemicroscope. However, when sfGFP1-10 and sfGFP11 express insame cell, they will interact each other and emit more intense fluorescence thaneach of them. The split GFP system is simple and does not change fusion proteinsolubility.
Primers for these biobrickvectors can be found in part:
BBa_G00100 (aka VF2)
BBa_G00101 (akaVR)
The split GFP system has manypractical applications. Obtaining soluble, well-folded recombinant proteins fordownstream applications requires screening large numbers of protein variants (mutants,fragments, fusion tags, folding partners) and testing many expression orrefolding conditions.(Ste´phanieCabantous, Thomas C Terwilliger & Geoffrey S Waldo,2005)
Part Sequence
Assume Protein Structure
We used Phyre2 to get the assume structure:
(by PyMOL)
Citation:
The Phyre2 web portal for protein modeling, prediction and analysis
Kelley LA et al.
Nature Protocols 10, 845-858 (2015).
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