Part:BBa_K3470016
Circuit
Constitutive Promoter – RBS – MerR - PmerT promoter - (RBS – MerT – RBS – MerP – RBS – MerE – RBS - MerC)*- RBS – MerB – RBS – GFP - Double Terminator (Deletion of MerA)
Usage and Biology
MerB encodes the organomercurial lyase enzyme and is usually found immediately downstream to MerA. It catalyzes breaking the bond between carbon and mercury through the protonolysis of compounds such as methylmercury. This produces the less mobile Hg (II) which is then reduced to Hg (0) by MerA. (Miki et al., 2008).
Proposed experimentation
Methylmercury concentrations in the presence and absence of MerA and MerB must be checked with 3 circuits. T
he first with presence of both MerA and MerB, the second and third with deletion of MerA and MerB respectively and the control with absence of both MerA and MerB. The team tested to see the increase in the Mer spectrum with the introduction of MerB and MerA to conclude that the addition of the two genes confer to a better resistance to methylmercury.
MTT assay must be performed to map the resistance provided by each gene MerA and MerB.
The principle of the MTT assay is that for most viable cells mitochondrial activity is constant and thereby an increase or decrease in the number of viable cells is linearly related to mitochondrial activity. Thus, any increase or decrease in viable cell number can be detected by measuring formazan concentration reflected in optical density (OD) using a plate reader at 540 and 720 nm. For drug sensitivity measurements, the OD values of wells with cells incubated with drugs are compared to the OD of wells with cells not exposed to drugs. (Van Meerloo, Kaspers and Cloos, 2011)
The resistance provided by each gene must be quantitatively mapped using the graphs. The introduction of MerB and MerA is expected to increase the Mer spectrum. The resistance provided is expected to be in the order Control < Circuit 3 < Circuit 2 < Circuit 1. Hence it is hypothesized that the addition of the two genes confers better resistance to methylmercury.
References
Barkay, T., Miller, S. M., & Summers, A. O. (2003). Bacterial mercury resistance from atoms to ecosystems. FEMS Microbiology Reviews, 27(2–3), 355–384. https://doi.org/10.1016/S0168-6445(03)00046-9
Miki, K., Watanabe, S., Kita, A., & Kobayashi, K. (2008). Crystal structure of the [2Fe-2S] transcriptional activator SoxR bound to DNA. Acta Crystallographica Section A Foundations of Crystallography, 64(a1), C89–C89. https://doi.org/10.1107/s0108767308097122
van Meerloo, J., Kaspers, G. J., & Cloos, J. (2011). Cell sensitivity assays: the MTT assay. Methods in molecular biology (Clifton, N.J.), 731, 237–245. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-1- 61779-080-5_20
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