Difference between revisions of "Part:BBa K316003"

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<partinfo>BBa_K316003 short</partinfo>
 
<partinfo>BBa_K316003 short</partinfo>
  
Catechol or catechol 2,3-dioxygenases (C2,3O) + O(2) is converted by a ring cleavage into 2-hydroxymuconate semialdehyde which is the toxic and bright yellow-coloured substrate<cite>1</cite>. This is a key enzyme in many (soil) bacterial species used for the degradation of aromatic compounds. Catechol 2,3-dioxygenase<cite>2</cite> was originally isolated from Pseudomonas putida  and is a homotetramer of C230 monomers. The tetramerization interactions position a ferrous ion critical for enzymatic activity. It has been deduced that intersubunit interaction is essential to produce a functioning enzyme after performing N and C terminal modifications on the monomer. Coming together the subunits generate an active site. The reaction itself takes place within seconds after the addition by Pasteur pipette or spraying of catechol at a 100mM stock solution diluted with DDH20 (used by our lab.) The toxic byproduct is thought to interfere with cell wall integrity and cellular machinery such that exposed cells gradually die.
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Catechol or catechol 2,3-dioxygenases (C2,3O) + O(2) is converted by a ring cleavage into 2-hydroxymuconate semialdehyde which is the cytotoxic and bright yellow-coloured product<cite>1</cite>. This is a key enzyme in many (soil) bacterial species used for the degradation of aromatic compounds. Catechol 2,3-dioxygenase<cite>2</cite> was originally isolated from Pseudomonas putida  and is active only as a homotetramer. Tetramerization, mediated via beta-sheets in the N-terminal regions of the monomers, allows formation of the active site which covalently binds a ferrous ion. The reaction itself takes place within seconds after the addition by Pasteur pipette or spraying of catechol at a 100mM stock solution diluted with DDH20 (used by our lab.) The toxic breakdown product is thought to interfere with cell wall integrity and cellular machinery such that exposed cells gradually die.
  
  
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==Part Characterisation ==
 
==Part Characterisation ==
  
 
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{|
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<span class='h3bb'><big>'''Optimum absorbtion wavelength for catechol assays'''</big></span>
 
<span class='h3bb'><big>'''Optimum absorbtion wavelength for catechol assays'''</big></span>
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[[Image:SpectraXylE.PNG|thumb|right|400px| Peak absorbance of catechol breakdown product (2-hydroxymuconic semialdehyde]]
  
 
The enzymatic reaction catalysed by XylE can also serve as a powerful reporter. The substrate - catechol - is colourless. However within seconds of its addition, the colonies or suspended cultures of XylE-expressing cells become clearly yellow<cite>3</cite> to the naked eye. This reaction allows direct measurement of XylE activity by measuring product concentrations, which absorbs light in the visible spectrum, at 380nm. In contrast to other common reporters like GFP, LacZ or Luciferase which do easily express correctly in thermophile environments, a XylE assay has also been shown to be functional in here. The spectrophotometric assay compared the spectra of two cultures of E.coli (one XylE gene transformed and the other not) were compared on addition of 0.1mM Catechol substrate.
 
The enzymatic reaction catalysed by XylE can also serve as a powerful reporter. The substrate - catechol - is colourless. However within seconds of its addition, the colonies or suspended cultures of XylE-expressing cells become clearly yellow<cite>3</cite> to the naked eye. This reaction allows direct measurement of XylE activity by measuring product concentrations, which absorbs light in the visible spectrum, at 380nm. In contrast to other common reporters like GFP, LacZ or Luciferase which do easily express correctly in thermophile environments, a XylE assay has also been shown to be functional in here. The spectrophotometric assay compared the spectra of two cultures of E.coli (one XylE gene transformed and the other not) were compared on addition of 0.1mM Catechol substrate.
 
 
 
[[Image:SpectraXylE.PNG|center|500px]]
 
 
 
'''Figure I.''' XylE assay : Peak absorbance of catechol breakdown product (2-hydroxymuconic semialdehyde).
 
  
 
A spectrophotometric assay of two cultures of E.coli (Blue: contains <bbpart>BBa_K316004</bbpart>, Red: not expressing XylE ) were compared on addition of 0.1mM Catechol substrate. The spectra show that in XylE transformed cells, a broad peak appears at about 380nm. The absorbance at this particular wavelength is due to the yellow  product of the reaction (2-hydroxymuconic semialdehyde (HMS)).
 
A spectrophotometric assay of two cultures of E.coli (Blue: contains <bbpart>BBa_K316004</bbpart>, Red: not expressing XylE ) were compared on addition of 0.1mM Catechol substrate. The spectra show that in XylE transformed cells, a broad peak appears at about 380nm. The absorbance at this particular wavelength is due to the yellow  product of the reaction (2-hydroxymuconic semialdehyde (HMS)).
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{|
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<span class='h3bb'><big>'''''In VItro'' Assay'''</big></span>
  
 
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[[Image:Experiment6.PNG|thumb|right|400px]]
<span class='h3bb'><big>'''''In VItro'' Assay'''</big></span>
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Due to technical limitations, to measure kinetic parameters of XylE is to lyse cells and . In this experiment cell lysate was assayed with increasing catechol concentrations. The rate at which the yellow product appears is directly proportional to the velocity of the reaction. The rate reaction was monitored by measuring color output of the reaction in the plate reader.
 
Due to technical limitations, to measure kinetic parameters of XylE is to lyse cells and . In this experiment cell lysate was assayed with increasing catechol concentrations. The rate at which the yellow product appears is directly proportional to the velocity of the reaction. The rate reaction was monitored by measuring color output of the reaction in the plate reader.
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Data collected was used to construct the Michaelis-Menten curve for the in vitro kinetics of XylE in cell lysate.  
 
Data collected was used to construct the Michaelis-Menten curve for the in vitro kinetics of XylE in cell lysate.  
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Michaelis-Menten curve was drawn using velocity values calculated from the slope at the initial stages of the reaction, as this is the only time when substrate concentration values are accurate. The plot was delineated by non-linear regression analysis using GraFit software tool[http://www.erithacus.com/grafit/]. The calculated Km is 0.71mM catechol (with a Vmax of 3.37 in O.D. arbitrary units for this dilution of cell lysate).
  
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For more detailed information, please check our wiki [http://2010.igem.org/Team:Imperial_College_London/Results/Exp6]
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{|
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<span class='h3bb'><big>'''Cytotoxicity of Catechol'''</big></span>
  
[[Image:Experiment6.PNG|center|400px]]
 
  
'''Figure I.''' Michaelis-Menten curve was drawn using velocity values calculated from the slope at the initial stages of the reaction, as this is the only time when substrate concentration values are accurate. The plot was delineated by non-linear regression analysis using GraFit software tool[http://www.erithacus.com/grafit/]. The calculated Km is 0.71mM catechol (with a Vmax of 3.37 in O.D. arbitrary units for this dilution of cell lysate).
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[[Image:XylE M9 Growth (600).jpg|thumb|right|400px|O.D. at 600 over 3h for XylE-transformed Top10 cells in presence of different catechol concentrations, growing in M9 medium.]]
  
For more detailed information, please check our wiki [http://2010.igem.org/Team:Imperial_College_London/Results/Exp6]
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The addition of catechol had distinctive deleterious effects on XylE expressing cells. While at 0% catechol growth-behavior did not show a significant change (dark blue), even the lowest concentration of 0.25% catechol appeared to drastically reduce cell-survival (red). In contrast, CMR-control cells did not change their growing behavior in the presence of catechol. From this we conclude that the breakdown product of catechol, 2-hydroxymuconic semialdehyde, and not Catechol itself, has strong cytotoxic effects
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Revision as of 23:44, 27 October 2010

XylE - catechol 2,3-dioxygenase from P.putida with terminator

Catechol or catechol 2,3-dioxygenases (C2,3O) + O(2) is converted by a ring cleavage into 2-hydroxymuconate semialdehyde which is the cytotoxic and bright yellow-coloured product1. This is a key enzyme in many (soil) bacterial species used for the degradation of aromatic compounds. Catechol 2,3-dioxygenase2 was originally isolated from Pseudomonas putida and is active only as a homotetramer. Tetramerization, mediated via beta-sheets in the N-terminal regions of the monomers, allows formation of the active site which covalently binds a ferrous ion. The reaction itself takes place within seconds after the addition by Pasteur pipette or spraying of catechol at a 100mM stock solution diluted with DDH20 (used by our lab.) The toxic breakdown product is thought to interfere with cell wall integrity and cellular machinery such that exposed cells gradually die.


Safety

Catechol is classed as irritant in the EU but as toxic in the USA, as well as being a possible carcinogen. It should therefore be handled with care and proper safety equipment. More information is available on the Material Safety Data Sheet[http://www.sciencelab.com/msds.php?msdsId=9927131].



Sequence and Features


Assembly Compatibility:
  • 10
    COMPATIBLE WITH RFC[10]
  • 12
    COMPATIBLE WITH RFC[12]
  • 21
    COMPATIBLE WITH RFC[21]
  • 23
    COMPATIBLE WITH RFC[23]
  • 25
    INCOMPATIBLE WITH RFC[25]
    Illegal NgoMIV site found at 337
    Illegal NgoMIV site found at 509
    Illegal AgeI site found at 860
  • 1000
    COMPATIBLE WITH RFC[1000]


Part Characterisation

Optimum absorbtion wavelength for catechol assays

Peak absorbance of catechol breakdown product (2-hydroxymuconic semialdehyde

The enzymatic reaction catalysed by XylE can also serve as a powerful reporter. The substrate - catechol - is colourless. However within seconds of its addition, the colonies or suspended cultures of XylE-expressing cells become clearly yellow3 to the naked eye. This reaction allows direct measurement of XylE activity by measuring product concentrations, which absorbs light in the visible spectrum, at 380nm. In contrast to other common reporters like GFP, LacZ or Luciferase which do easily express correctly in thermophile environments, a XylE assay has also been shown to be functional in here. The spectrophotometric assay compared the spectra of two cultures of E.coli (one XylE gene transformed and the other not) were compared on addition of 0.1mM Catechol substrate.

A spectrophotometric assay of two cultures of E.coli (Blue: contains BBa_K316004, Red: not expressing XylE ) were compared on addition of 0.1mM Catechol substrate. The spectra show that in XylE transformed cells, a broad peak appears at about 380nm. The absorbance at this particular wavelength is due to the yellow product of the reaction (2-hydroxymuconic semialdehyde (HMS)).

In VItro Assay

Experiment6.PNG

Due to technical limitations, to measure kinetic parameters of XylE is to lyse cells and . In this experiment cell lysate was assayed with increasing catechol concentrations. The rate at which the yellow product appears is directly proportional to the velocity of the reaction. The rate reaction was monitored by measuring color output of the reaction in the plate reader.

Cell lysate was tested for dioxygenase activity to determine appropriate dilutions for the assay. The cell lysate was obtained from a 100ml overnight culture and diluted by a factor of 20 to obtain a suitable concentration of total enzyme for the plate reader assay. The concentrations of catechol used were 1, 2, 5, 10, 25, 50 mM.

Data collected was used to construct the Michaelis-Menten curve for the in vitro kinetics of XylE in cell lysate. Michaelis-Menten curve was drawn using velocity values calculated from the slope at the initial stages of the reaction, as this is the only time when substrate concentration values are accurate. The plot was delineated by non-linear regression analysis using GraFit software tool[http://www.erithacus.com/grafit/]. The calculated Km is 0.71mM catechol (with a Vmax of 3.37 in O.D. arbitrary units for this dilution of cell lysate).

For more detailed information, please check our wiki [http://2010.igem.org/Team:Imperial_College_London/Results/Exp6]

Cytotoxicity of Catechol


O.D. at 600 over 3h for XylE-transformed Top10 cells in presence of different catechol concentrations, growing in M9 medium.

The addition of catechol had distinctive deleterious effects on XylE expressing cells. While at 0% catechol growth-behavior did not show a significant change (dark blue), even the lowest concentration of 0.25% catechol appeared to drastically reduce cell-survival (red). In contrast, CMR-control cells did not change their growing behavior in the presence of catechol. From this we conclude that the breakdown product of catechol, 2-hydroxymuconic semialdehyde, and not Catechol itself, has strong cytotoxic effects


Characterisation data was obtained for XylE BBa_K316003. In addition constructs under two different promoters: J23101-XylE BBa_K316004 from E. coli was used to categorise B. subtilis derived Pveg-XylE BBa_K316005. Also GFP-XylE constructs BBa_K316007 were tested to determine the effectiveness of repression. These are described on our wiki[http://2010.igem.org/Team:Imperial_College_London/Results] and the aforementioned parts pages.


References

<biblio>

  1. 1 pmid=10368270
  2. 2 pmid=12519074
  3. 3 pmid=6405380

</biblio>