Part:BBa_K606036
pT7 SpoVG T7 SpoVG GFP T7terminator.
T7 RNA polymerase auto-amplifier system for B. Subtilis and E. coli
Usage and Biology
If you want to detect the presence of a tiny phenomena, the synthetic biologist has to rely on a signal amplifier, to detect it's signal. The problem of building a positive feed-back loop auto-amplifier is the sensitivity to noise.
The T7 RNA polymerase has a very specific promoter, of 25 nucleotides, that can be recognize by no other polymerases. Though, the system is really orthogonal, as long as there is no polymerase leakeage from the transcription in the plasmid. Synthetic biology plasmids (here pSB1C3) are protected from plasmid noise by 4 standards terminators. You might need to add some others if you are working on a non silent plasmid.
The leakeage of this system has been characterized (see the experiments page), and it is shown that there is very little false positive. Once the system is activated, the cell stop deviding and glow very high.
You can use this part directly to detect a tiny amount of T7 RNA polymerase in a cell (in the case of a cell infection for instance), or by cloning the promoter you want to test in front of this construct.
The RBS used here are for B. subtilis but the system works fine in E. coli as well.
Sequence and Features
- 10COMPATIBLE WITH RFC[10]
- 12COMPATIBLE WITH RFC[12]
- 21COMPATIBLE WITH RFC[21]
- 23COMPATIBLE WITH RFC[23]
- 25INCOMPATIBLE WITH RFC[25]Illegal NgoMIV site found at 3598
- 1000INCOMPATIBLE WITH RFC[1000]Illegal BsaI.rc site found at 3374
//regulation/positive
receiver
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