Difference between revisions of "Part:BBa K1189037"
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<img src="https://static.igem.org/mediawiki/2013/thumb/3/34/Assembled_FerriTALE.png/463px-Assembled_FerriTALE.png" alt="BBa_K1189037 joined with DNA sensing TALEs" width="400" height="500"> | <img src="https://static.igem.org/mediawiki/2013/thumb/3/34/Assembled_FerriTALE.png/463px-Assembled_FerriTALE.png" alt="BBa_K1189037 joined with DNA sensing TALEs" width="400" height="500"> | ||
<figcaption> | <figcaption> | ||
− | <p><b>Figure 1.</b> 3D <i>in silico</i> rendering of BBa_K1189037 formed into functional nanoparticles bound to DNA sensing TALEs. TALEs are | + | <p><b>Figure 1.</b> 3D <i>in silico</i> rendering of BBa_K1189037 formed into functional nanoparticles bound to DNA sensing TALEs. The iron core is chemically modified and use to show when TALEs are bound to DNA. The TALEs are one specific, particular application of the ferritin E coil di-subunit fusion. This nanoparticle is the molecular basis of a DNA lateral flow strip biosensor pursued by the 2013 iGEM Calgary team.</p> |
</figcaption> | </figcaption> | ||
</figure> | </figure> |
Revision as of 17:41, 31 October 2013
The ferrtin subunit fusion
Ferritin is a protein shelled nanoparticle and is composed of a mixture of 24 light (BBa_K1189024) and heavy (BBa_K1189025) subunits. It is ubiquitous across eukaryotic and prokaryotic systems and is used to sequester intracellular iron (Chasteen et al., 1991). The 2013 iGEM Calgary used ferritin’s iron core as a reporter and its protein shell to scaffold DNA sensing TALEs as part of their project, the FerriTALE (see Figure 1).
This particular version is a fusion of heavy and light ferritin subunits, such that nanoparticles are formed from 12 di-subunits. The rationale for this design is that it reduces the number of N-termini on ferritin to which proteins can be fused by half, which is important for lessening potential steric hindrances among fused proteins in the 3D sphere surrounding ferritin. Additionally, di-subunits ensure a 1:1 ratio of heavy and light subunits which ensures consistency in ferritin’s ability to uptake iron. Moreover, these fusions have been shown stable in engineered applications with other proteins scaffolded to ferritin (Dehal et al., 2010).
Design features
This part has an N-terminal fusion to an E coil connected to ferritin by a GS linker. The coil system is of utility to other iGEM teams because they can express K coils on their own proteins of interest, and bind them to the complementary E coil on ferritin. Such a coiled-coil linker system reduces potential for large protein fusions to harm ferritin formation, allowing user to build intricate nanoparticle devices with myriad proteins. See Figures 2 application examples.
This part is identical to BBa_1189018, with the exception of a his-tag for purification.
Results
The 2013 iGEM Calgary successfully expressed and purified this protein in pSB1C3 and per this part sequence exactly using and FPLC and metal affinity purification of the his tag. See Figure 3 for an SDS-PAGE of this isolate. Please see the experience page for data on another expression vector which generated this protein with a higher yield.
GEL
This purified protein product was successfully converted into Prussian blue ferritin, a robust colourmetric reporter. Figure 4 shows that this part with coiled-coils performs better as a reporter than direct fusions to TALEs (BBa_K118021). It seems that large protein fusions reduce effectiveness of ferritin as a reporter. Figure 5 shows that ferritin with coiled-coils (BBa_1189037) maintains reporter functionality when TALEs are scaffolded using coiled-coil linkers.
Please see the experience page page for a detailed analysis of how Prussian blue ferritin performs as a reporter.
References
Sequence and Features
- 10COMPATIBLE WITH RFC[10]
- 12COMPATIBLE WITH RFC[12]
- 21COMPATIBLE WITH RFC[21]
- 23COMPATIBLE WITH RFC[23]
- 25COMPATIBLE WITH RFC[25]
- 1000INCOMPATIBLE WITH RFC[1000]Illegal BsaI.rc site found at 1307