Difference between revisions of "Part:BBa K2609002"

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===Usage and Biology===
 
===Usage and Biology===
 
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<p>The T4 bacteriophage uses its long tail fiber to recognize and bind to its receptor OmpC on the surface of <i>E. coli</i> cells, its cognate host. The binding is mediated by non-covalent interactions that leads to the docking of the tip of the tail fiber (protein gp37) with OmpC in an extremely stable fashion.</p>
 
 
<p>This part is the coding sequence of a modified version of gp37 with the following amino acid changes</p>
 
 
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<p>The T4 bacteriophage uses its long tail fiber to recognize and bind to its receptor OmpC on the surface of <i>E. coli</i> cells, its cognate host. The binding is mediated by non-covalent interactions that leads to the docking of the tip of the tail fiber (protein gp37) with OmpC in an extremely stable fashion.</p>
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<p>This part is the coding sequence of a modified version of gp37 with the following amino acid changes</p>
 
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Revision as of 16:01, 2 October 2018


T4 bacteriophage long tail fiber protein gp37 (Modification I)

Coding sequence of the long tail fiber protein from T4 bacteriophage. The sequence has been modified in-silico for better binding to phosphoethanolamine near the receptor binding end of the protein. This is the first such modification in our series of four modifications.


Usage and Biology

table, th, td { border: 1px solid black; border-collapse: collapse; } th, td { padding: 15px; text-align: left; }

Biology

The T4 bacteriophage uses its long tail fiber to recognize and bind to its receptor OmpC on the surface of E. coli cells, its cognate host. The binding is mediated by non-covalent interactions that leads to the docking of the tip of the tail fiber (protein gp37) with OmpC in an extremely stable fashion.

This part is the coding sequence of a modified version of gp37 with the following amino acid changes

Firstname Lastname Age
Jill Smith 50
Eve Jackson 94
John Doe 80

The free movement of the rest of the phage body against the fixed tail leads to a confirmation change in the baseplate. This confirmation change pulls the entire phage to the cell surface followed by subsequent ejection of the phage DNA into the host[1]. The final injection happens with the aid of a "tail tube" that embeds itself into the outer membrane of the host and the mechanism is well conserved across multiple hosts because of similar membrane structures. The first interaction with the cell surface, i.e. the long tail fiber binding, is what determines the specificity of the phage to the host cell[2]. Modification of the tip of the tail fiber hence allows for a switching of the receptor that is used by the phage to infect the cell.

Usage

IISc-Bangalore iGEM 2018

We used an in silico PhageModifier pipeline to modify the native gp37 to have increased affinity for phosphoethanolamine. This part is the coding sequence of the first such modification with a predicted binding affinity of ____ kcal/mol for phosphoethanolamine (compared to the ___kcal/mol of the wildtype protein).

Characterization

Extraction and purification with BBa_K2609012

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 AgeI site found at 424
  • 1000
    COMPATIBLE WITH RFC[1000]


References

[1] Leiman, Petr G., et al. "Three-dimensional rearrangement of proteins in the tail of bacteriophage T4 on infection of its host." Cell 118.4 (2004): 419-429.
[2] Yoichi, Masatoshi, et al. "Alteration of tail fiber protein gp38 enables T2 phage to infect Escherichia coli O157: H7." Journal of biotechnology 115.1 (2005): 101-107.
[3] Rakhuba, D. V., et al. "Bacteriophage receptors, mechanisms of phage adsorption and penetration into host cell." Pol. J. Microbiol 59.3 (2010): 145-155.
[4] Bartual, Sergio G., et al. "Structure of the bacteriophage T4 long tail fiber receptor-binding tip." Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences 107.47 (2010): 20287-20292.