Part:BBa_K2560255:Design
accD subunit from C. glutamicum, codonoptimized for V. natriegens
- 10COMPATIBLE WITH RFC[10]
- 12COMPATIBLE WITH RFC[12]
- 21INCOMPATIBLE WITH RFC[21]Illegal BglII site found at 768
- 23COMPATIBLE WITH RFC[23]
- 25INCOMPATIBLE WITH RFC[25]Illegal AgeI site found at 277
- 1000COMPATIBLE WITH RFC[1000]
Design Notes
The part contains the whole coding region from the accD gene of C. glutamicum (NCgl0678) without the startcodon. This region is flanked by overhangs which are Phytobrick- and MoClo-compatible and by two BsaI recognition sites (Weber et al., 2011). It was built with the Marburg Toolbox, a golden gate based toolbox for modular cloning. According to the Marburg Toolbox, the part is designed as a 4Y-part (CDS). If accD shall be used with an 5' tag use this part, if there is no need for tagging, use BBa_K2560252.
GGTCTCGGATG-coding_region-GCTTTGAGACC
The sequence was codonoptimized for V. natriegens ATCC 14048.
Source
Source of the part:
Genome: Corynebacterium glutamicum ATCC 13032
Accession number of gene: NCgl0678
Accession number of encoded protein: NP_599940.1
accD was codonoptimized for V. natriegens and then synthetisized and integrated into the vector BBa_K2560002via BsmBI
References
Weber E., Engler C., Gruetzner R., Werner S., Marillonnet S. (2011). A modular cloning system for standardized assembly of multigene constructs. PLoS One 6:e16765. 10.1371/journal.pone.0016765
Marburg Toolbox
We proudly present the Marburg Collection, a novel golden-gate-based toolbox containing various parts that are compatible with the PhytoBrick system and MoClo. Compared to other bacterial toolboxes, the Marburg Collection shines with superior flexibility. We overcame the rigid paradigm of plasmid construction - thinking in fixed backbone and insert categories - by achieving complete de novo assembly of plasmids.
36 connectors facilitate flexible cloning of multigene constructs and even allow for the inversion of individual transcription units. Additionally, our connectors function as insulators to avoid undesired crosstalk.
The Marburg Collection contains 123 parts in total, including:
inducible promoters, reporters, fluorescence and epitope tags, oris, resistance cassettes and genome engineering tools. To increase the value of the Marburg Collection, we additionally provide detailed experimental characterization for V. natriegens and a supportive software. We aspire availability of our toolbox for future iGEM teams to empower accelerated progression in their ambitious projects.