Help:Assembly Compatibility

Revision as of 21:43, 12 June 2014 by Vinoo (Talk | contribs)

How is a part compatible?

The part's sequence must not contain illegal restriction sites as defined by the assembly standard.

  • A part that is BioBrick compatible will not have the following restriction sites: EcoRI, XbaI, SpeI, PstI, and NotI. All of these restriction sites belong to the prefix and suffix of the BioBrick assembly standard.

Supported Standards

By supporting an assembly standard, the Registry software can detect and understand the assembly process for parts. This includes:

  • Detection of illegal restriction sites in a part's sequence
  • Recognizing assembly scars in composite parts
  • Identification of a sample's assembly standard, through sequence verification of the sample's prefix and suffix
    • Remember, a part can have many samples in the Registry's Repository. Those samples can be in plasmid backbones of different assembly standards.


View the Assembly Systems Page to see exactly what the Registry software looks for in these supported assembly standards

Click below to view the supported assembly standards as specified by their original RFC

  • 10 - BioBrick - [http://dspace.mit.edu/handle/1721.1/45138 RFC Documentation]
  • 12 - BioBrick 2 - [http://dspace.mit.edu/handle/1721.1/45139 RFC Documentation]
  • 21 - Berkeley/BglBricks - [http://dspace.mit.edu/handle/1721.1/46747 RFC Documentation]
  • 23 - Silver Standard - [http://dspace.mit.edu/handle/1721.1/32535 RFC Documentation]
  • 25 - Freiburg Standard - [http://dspace.mit.edu/handle/1721.1/45140 RFC Documentation]
  • 1000 - MoClo

Why is compatibility important?

iGEM and the Registry is built on Standard Biological Parts.

  • Compatibility ensures that a user can use the part with said assembly standard.
  • BioBrick compatible parts ensure that all teams can assemble parts with 3A Assembly, in addition to other assembly techniques

My part is not BioBrick compatible

Before working with your part in the lab (characterizing/measuring), make sure it is BioBrick compatible. If not...

  • Synthesize your part to remove any illegal restriction sites, through synonymous substitutions (silent mutations). Synthesis is also useful, since you can synthesize your part with the BioBrick prefix and suffix, so it is ready for shipping to the Registry. See our synthesis offer with IDT
  • Use site-specific mutagenesis to remove any illegal restriction sites, through synonymous substitutions (silent mutations).