Designed by: Ziying Wang Group: iGEM23_NUDT-CHINA (2023-10-10)
Engineered Mitochondrial Uncoupler Pdp1NTD-EGFP-UCP1
enable the PVC-mediated alteration of mammalian cell energy expenditure
Profile
Name: Engineered Mitochondrial Uncoupler Pdp1NTD-EGFP-UCP1
Base Pairs: 1917 bp
Origin: Photorhabdus, Aequorea Victoria, Homo Sapiens
Properties:enable the PVC-mediated alteration of mammalian cell energy expenditure
Usage and Biology
UCP1 is a key mitochondrial uncoupling protein in mammalian cells that regulates cellular energy expenditure and thermogenesis[1]. This part demonstrates a UCP1-based synthetic mitochondrial uncoupler that is compatable to the PVC delivery system (see the Description page of iGEM23_NUDT-CHINA wiki for more information about the PVC system). In mammalian cells, this part would be translocated into mitochondria and works as a proton transporter that disconnects oxygen consumption from ATP synthesis, thereby dissipates energy in the form of heat, leading to an increase in energy expenditure and basal metabolic rate.[2]
Special Design
This part includes a Pdp1NTD domain to ensure the compatability with the PVC delivery system, an EGFP domain for visualization and improving the protein production in E.coli, and a UCP1 mitochondrial uncoupling domain to enable the functionality. In Part:BBa_K4960022, we have demonstrated that the Pdp1NTD-UCP1-EGFP configuration failed to effectively localize into mitochondria, possibly due to an unintended interaction between the Pdp1NTD domain and UCP1 (as highlighted in the red box in Figure 1a). To address this issue, we used AlphaFold2 to predict some of the possible structures and found that we could resolve this problem by swapping UCP1 and EGFP (as shown in Figure 1b). Consequently, we designed this part by connecting Pdp1NTD to the N-terminus EGFP and a UCP1 to the C-terminus (as depicted in Figure 1c).