Difference between revisions of "Part:BBa K5291010:Design"
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[1]Gerdes, K., et al., Mechanism of postsegregational killing by the hok gene product of the parB system of plasmid R1 and its homology with the relF gene product of the E. coli relB operon. The EMBO Journal, 1986. 5(8): p. 2023-2029. | [1]Gerdes, K., et al., Mechanism of postsegregational killing by the hok gene product of the parB system of plasmid R1 and its homology with the relF gene product of the E. coli relB operon. The EMBO Journal, 1986. 5(8): p. 2023-2029. | ||
[2]Gerdes, K., et al., The hok killer gene family in gram-negative bacteria. The New biologist, 1990. 2: p. 946-56. | [2]Gerdes, K., et al., The hok killer gene family in gram-negative bacteria. The New biologist, 1990. 2: p. 946-56. | ||
+ | [3]Gong, C.C. and S. Klumpp, Modeling sRNA-Regulated Plasmid Maintenance. PLoS One, 2017. 12(1): p. e0169703. |
Revision as of 13:17, 10 August 2024
hok/mok
Assembly Compatibility:
- 10COMPATIBLE WITH RFC[10]
- 12COMPATIBLE WITH RFC[12]
- 21COMPATIBLE WITH RFC[21]
- 23COMPATIBLE WITH RFC[23]
- 25COMPATIBLE WITH RFC[25]
- 1000COMPATIBLE WITH RFC[1000]
Design Notes
In our design we choose a strong promoter that can be activated by citrate. The hok/sok system is a efficient system controlled by two promoters with different strength, which fits right in with our design with a strong promoter and a weak promoter.
Source
Escherichia coli
References
[1]Gerdes, K., et al., Mechanism of postsegregational killing by the hok gene product of the parB system of plasmid R1 and its homology with the relF gene product of the E. coli relB operon. The EMBO Journal, 1986. 5(8): p. 2023-2029. [2]Gerdes, K., et al., The hok killer gene family in gram-negative bacteria. The New biologist, 1990. 2: p. 946-56. [3]Gong, C.C. and S. Klumpp, Modeling sRNA-Regulated Plasmid Maintenance. PLoS One, 2017. 12(1): p. e0169703.