Composite

Part:BBa_K2607001:Design

Designed by: Andrea Laurentius   Group: iGEM18_UI_Indonesia   (2018-09-25)
Revision as of 03:54, 15 October 2018 by Valdiven (Talk | contribs) (Design Notes)


HB-EGF/Tar Receptor (HT) Device


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 1294
  • 1000
    INCOMPATIBLE WITH RFC[1000]
    Illegal BsaI site found at 1434


Design Notes

Figure 1. The selected segment of Tar protein. The functional intracellular domain of Tar is shown as yellow box, blue box is transmembrane domain and orange box is periplasmic domain. Selected Tar domain expands from 1st-33rd amino acids and 191st-553rd amino acids. Modification of binding domain is located between 33rd–191st amino acids.

In HB-EGF, the part that serves as binding domain for diphtheria exotoxin predominantly located in the extracellular environment. Therefore, the domain, expands between 20th–160th amino acid, was selected from natural HB-EGF protein. On the other hand, the Tar domain that are functions to establish intracellular chemotactic signalling includes NdeI cutting-site (around 257th amino acid) until the utmost C-terminal of the protein (the 553rd amino acid). By those factors, our team also selected Tar domains involving the 1st–33rd and 191st–553rd amino acid as part of chimeric protein (Figure 1).

Figure 2. The graph above explains the result of HB-EGF/Tar orientation, which began from C-terminus (left) to N-terminus (right). Y-axis pictured the possibility of nth amino acid on protein located somewhere between transmembrane (red part), intracellular (blue line), and extracellular (pink line). There is also a diagram located above the graph that represent the most possible location of each domain (with elongated box).

Our team have predicted the HB-EGF/Tar protein orientation in the Escherichia coli membrane. For this purpose, server TMHMM and OPM Membrane, are utilized to predict protein orientation (Figure 2). Conceptual hypothesis about the chimera protein is that it should begin its orientation of C-terminus in cytoplasm, then continued to fold into transmembrane and extracellular sites, as well as re-folding towards cytoplasm. From the results, it could be concluded that the protein was oriented as expected in the hypothesis. Therefore, the usage of chimera protein is predicted to be functional anatomically.

Figure 3. Molecular comparation of HB-EGF native protein (left) with the HB-EGF/Tar fusion (right). The pink-coloured domain is intracellularly located as the N-terminus, yellow-coloured domain for the transmembrane one. Then, purple-coloured could be a sign as the extracellular domain, finally folding into transmembrane and back to cytoplasm with orange-coloured and cyan-coloured domain respectively.

Source

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References