Part:BBa_K638402
TorA tag variant
This is an improved version of part BBa_K233307 designed to allow comparison with measurements of functionality in the literature, and to make it easier to synthesise.
This TorA leader sequence variant has had been successfully used to export GFP to the periplasm of E.coli as described [http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/11123687 here].
Sequence and Features
- 10COMPATIBLE WITH RFC[10]
- 12COMPATIBLE WITH RFC[12]
- 21COMPATIBLE WITH RFC[21]
- 23COMPATIBLE WITH RFC[23]
- 25COMPATIBLE WITH RFC[25]
- 1000COMPATIBLE WITH RFC[1000]
Usage and Biology
Improving efficiency of export (Literature Data)
[http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/11123687 Thomas et al] described use of the part by fusing it to GFP. Efficiency of export is improved by removing induction from medium.
[http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/12711311 Barrett et al] characterised improved export by altering growth conditions and upregulating TAT export machinery , using the same TorA-GFP fusion.
[[
As the below graph shows that the majority of GFP is membrane associated (and therefore does not fluoresce) - Barrett et al calculated that only ~4% of export tagged GFP reached the periplasm in an active form. They greatly improved export efficiency by upregulating production of
Producing BBa_k638402 from primer synthesis
We assembled the basic part by using 2 synthetic oligonucleotides (TorA-FWD and TorA-REV in the table and diagram below). These oligonucleotides have a 20bp overlap and can be used to generate the entire TorA tag by PCR.
Name | Sequence | Tm |
---|---|---|
TorA FWD | ATGGCGAACAACGACTTATTTCAGGCTTCTCGGCGTCGCTTTCTGGCGCAGCTGGGCGGATTAACGGTGGCGGGT | 70.98°C |
TorA REV | TGCGGCTTGTGCTGCCGTCGCTCTGCGAGGAGTCAACAGCGACGGGCCCAACATACCCGCCACCGTTAATCCGCC | 70.98°C |
Thermocycler profile: 10 cycles: Melt 95°C 10 sec / Anneal 65°C 30 sec / Extend 72°C 20 sec
Insertion of TorA tag into a construct
Cambridge 2011 created scar-free fusions of this export tag to our protein of interest by [http://www.cambridgeigem.org/RFC57.pdf Gibson Assembly]. Alternatively, Biobrick prefixes and suffixes could be added to this oligonucleotides (or added seperately) enabling the creation of in-frame fusions by assembly techniques such as BBF RFC 23 or 25.
The diagram below shows the 4 oligonucleotides needed to add a TorA tag by [http://www.cambridgeigem.org/RFC57.pdf Gibson Assembly]. TorA-FWD and TorA-REV generate the tag as described above. Gibson-primer-FWD and Gibson-primer-REV anneal to the template construct either side of where the TorA tag is to be placed. Gibson-primer-FWD has a tail which is the last 40bp of the TorA tag, and Gibson-primer-REV has a tail which is the reverse compliment of first 40bp of the TorA tag. These 40bp of overlap are what is required for [http://www.cambridgeigem.org/RFC57.pdf Gibson Assembly].
n/a | TorA tag variant |