Coding
g3p
Part:BBa_K257001:Design
Designed by: Guillaume Cambray & Guillaume Beauclair Group: iGEM09_Paris (2009-06-20)
Gene 3 protein of filamentous phages without the 18 first amino acids
Assembly Compatibility:
- 10COMPATIBLE WITH RFC[10]
- 12COMPATIBLE WITH RFC[12]
- 21INCOMPATIBLE WITH RFC[21]Illegal BamHI site found at 592
- 23COMPATIBLE WITH RFC[23]
- 25COMPATIBLE WITH RFC[25]
- 1000COMPATIBLE WITH RFC[1000]
Design Notes
- In our project we use g3p as a fusion to OmpA-Linker (No part name specified with partinfo tag.) which need SacI restriction site for inframe fusion.
- So we design g3p with SacI site at the N-terminal. SacI (GAGCT^C) site is shared with XbaI (T^CTAGA) in order to have SacI site for fusion and standard sites.
- Moreover we decide to suppres the signal peptide (18 first amino acids) which is cleaved in order to conserve the N-ter fusion.
Source
- g3p could be found in filamentous bacteriophages like M13, fd, f1, etc... or in phage helper like M13KO7, etc...
References
- The Mechanism of Bacterial Infection by Filamentous Phages Involves Molecular Interactions between TolA and Phage Protein 3 Domains. Fredrik Karlsson, Carl A. K. Borrebaeck, Nina Nilsson, and Ann-Christin Malmborg-Hager
- Interdomain interactions within the gene 3 protein of philamentous phage. Jean Chatellier, Oliver Hartley, Andrew D. Grifths, Alan R. Fershta, Greg Wintera, Lutz Riechmannb
- A prokaryotic membrane anchor sequence: Carboxyl terminus of bacteriophage fl gene III protein retains it in the membrane. Jef D. Boeke AND Peter Model