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Revision as of 17:28, 21 October 2019

2019 Team:Fudan-TSI Judging


Judging

Mutation library generation is critical for biological and medical research. Our toolbox "R-Evolution" is orthogonal and provides a wide range of applications among various species. It serves as a foundational advance to synthetic biology.

cover judging

Bronze Requirements

#1 Registration Please come to see our presentation at Room 309 on Nov 2nd at 9:30 am, and feel free to visit our poster stand in Zone 1-20.
#2 Deliverables: judging form, wiki, poster, and presentation Done
#3 We have carefully documented each of our responsibilities and contribution to the project as well as the help we were offered by others. Attributions
#4 We documented on the page how and why we chose our iGEM project, and in a few sentences describe how we will achieve our goal. We listed the work outside or inside of iGEM that inspired our project, how we selected our project goal, and why we thought our project was a useful application of synthetic biology. We put down how we came up with our mutagenesis system at Description, and what we’re trying to achieve through the implementation of our project at Applied Design.
#5 We have added quantitative experimental characterization data to an existing part from the Registry of Standard Biological Parts: 1) document the experimental characterization on the registry main page; 2) this existing part is a Basic part and BioBrick RFC10 compatible; 3) NOT from our 2019 part number range. Part:BBa_K1021005
Part:BBa_E0040 (We used 4 methods to verify and characterize the fluorescence recovery of EGFP from its nonsense mutant.)

Silver Requirements

#1 One new BioBrick Part of our own design that is related to our project works as expected: 1) document the experimental characterization on the registry main page; 2) may be a Basic or Composite part; 3) BioBrick RFC10 compatible; 4) NOT the new part documented for Gold #2. Part:BBa_K3257071
Part:BBa_K3257072
Part:BBa_K3257073
Different degradation tags with differed degradation dynamics are tested, each of their effect on protein steady-state concentration is measured.
#2 We have significantly worked with currently registered 2019 iGEM teams in a meaningful way. We actively collaborated with different teams on various activities, including experimental design, plasmid sharing, and human practices. Collaborations
#3 We have thought carefully and creatively about whether our work is responsible and good for the world. We documented how we have investigated these issues, how we engaged with communities relevant to our goal, why we chose this approach, what we have learned, and the potential impact of our project’s success. In our Human Practices work, we presented how we interacted with the public and tried to promote understanding of biological research. Also, we recorded in detail how we engaged with different researchers in regards to our project’s prospects.

Gold Requirements

#1 We have expand on our silver medal activity by demonstrating how we have integrated the investigated issues into the purpose, design, and execution of our project. We documented our process and described how our human practices work informed and shaped our project at different stages. Through interacting with relevant researchers, we gained valuable insight on experimental design, project application, modeling and even human practice work itself.
#2 We improved a previous part and have created a new BioBrick Part that has a functional improvement of an existing BioBrick Part: 1) document the experimental characterization on the registry main page; 2) BioBrick RFC10 compatible; 3) the sequences of the new and existing parts are different; 3) the existing part is NOT be from our 2019 part number range; 4) the existing part is different from the part we used in Bronze #5; 5) the new part we create is different from the new part documented in Silver #1. Part:BBa_C0012Part:BBa_K3257045
We improved the LacI repressor of Lac operon to enable lower level of basal leakage, and better orthogonality with arabinose inducer.
#3 Our project’s design and implementation is based on insight we have gained from modeling. We developed a new model for our project. We thoroughly documented: assumptions, relevant data, model results, and a clear explanation of our model. The model has impacted our project design in a meaningful way. We used deterministic and stochastic models to simulate the intracellular reactions in our system. Our modeling demonstrated theoretically of our system’s function and provided important guidance on several of our experimental designs.
#4 We demonstrated that the two critical component of our system, reverse transcriptase and Cre recombinase are functional, and proved the feasibility of our system design. We thought carefully and complied all safety requirements in carrying out experiments. Demonstration

Special Prizes

Integrated Human Practices

During the progress of our project, we communicated with researchers of various research focus and improved our design based on their insights. 1) We interviewed the potential users of our system, and learned that mutation rate and labor cost are their major concerns. We then addressed both issues in our system design. 2) We discussed with researchers working on prokaryotes and received valuable feedback. Prof. Lin warned us of the false-positive caused by Cre, which inspired us to attach a degradation tag to it. Prof. Alper confirmed the necessity of capsid protein for efficient reverse transcription. 3) Modeling benefited as well. With help from Prof. Huang, we established the design of dividing our system into three sub-models. 4) In addition, we categorized and organized the HP approaches of previous projects and released a guidebook for collaborators and future teams.

Education and Public Engagement

Interaction is our key focus. We divided our audience into three categories: kids, students, and the general public. 1) For kids, we introduced the concept and function of DNA through workshop. In the process, we established a long-term collaboration with Fudan Jiuqian Volunteer Association. 2) For students, to inspire them to pursue biological research, we held three lectures on synthetic biology, and one workshop to share lab experience. We also designed a boardgame to enlighten them with the mechanisms and significance of continuous evolution. 3) For the general public, we aimed to popularize biology - we distributed pamphlets with examples of how synthetic biology advancements have changed our lives, and published a video on PCR procedures to convey that the important discoveries were made from "down-to-earth" experiments. 4) In addition, we released a HP guidebook through cataloguing previous projects, which we distributed to collaborators and hope to guide future teams.

Model

In our modeling, we successfully simulated the function of our mutagenesis system, and contributed to improve our experimental setup. We divided our system into 3 sub-models: induced expression model, reverse transcription model and Cre recombination model. We utilized deterministic and stochastic techniques with parameters derived from our experiments or published papers. Our modeling established theoretical basis for our experiments: 1) The determination of simultaneous or separate expression of reverse transcriptase and Cre is guided by models revealing their different working concentration. 2) We estimated the optimal expression level and induction time needed to achieve maximal recombination efficiency. 3) We modeled the effect of Cre degradation on recombination. 4) We demonstrated that mutations accumulate accompanying E. coli growth. Modeling acted as a shortcut of answering questions concerning experimental setup and revealed new insights into our system. Thus, we believe that our modeling work is very competitive for the best modeling prize.

Measurement

We focused our measurement on characterizing the fluorescence recovery of EGFP from its nonsense mutation in the following 4 ways: 1) Green fluorescence could be seen on the plate under UV light through naked eyes and recorded by a cellphone camera. Liquid culture could be placed in a culture dish and fluorescence is easily detectable under fluorescent microscopy. 2) We designed PCR primers to only amplify the recovered EGFP sequence but not the mutated version. The amplified band could be easily visualized after electrophoresis. 3) Fluorescence level was quantified through microplate reader according to fluorescein solutions and silicon beads, both standard samples are from the distributed measurement kit. 4) We ran PAGE gel of IPTG induced bacterial lysates. The mutated version produced a truncated protein at 17.8 kD, while the recovered EGFP is 26.9 kD. We used multiple methods to ensure that EGFP is truly recovered from its nonsense mutation.

Software Tool

Our software simplifies the primer design process for target-specific mutagenesis via reverse transcriptase (RT). We called it tRNA primer designer. Studies have shown that tRNA functions as the primer for in vivo reverse transcription initiation: the 5' end of the tRNA interacts with RT, and the 3' end matches with the mRNA encoding the target. The software consists of 4 parts: reverse transcriptase selection, target sequence input, designed-tRNA visualization, and primer output. Although we only test MMLV-RT experimentally, the software can adjust its designing method based on the properties of well-studied RT from 3 species, MMLV, HIV-1 and RSV. Users could design their tRNA primers even for eukaryotic experiments. In addition, we calculate and output the tRNA acceptor stem annealing temperature, as this might be used as an indicator for likelihood to success.

Hardware

To track bacteria growth on the plate and observe the fluorescence recovery from nonsense mutation due to continuous mutagenesis, we devised this hardware - the Fluorescence Tracker. It provides continuous, hands-off recording of the growth of plate colonies as well as fluorescent protein expression. For users of our mutagenesis system, with the help of our hardware, they could plate, and then monitor all plates together to increase the likelihood of spotting bacteria colonies with recovered fluorescence at the earliest time point. After discussions with our PI, we improved our hardware by adding remote access through TeamViewer, which allows visualizing the dynamic changes on smartphones. Although the current hardware is only suitable for monitoring fluorescence recovery, it could be easily modified to monitor bacteria colonies growing out of any antibiotic plate. Our hardware allows us to come to lab knowing that a plate with desired colonies is waiting for us.

New basic part

BBa_K3257042

New composite part

BBa_K3257101

Part Collection

We provide a toolbox for in vivo site-specific continuous mutagenesis. 1) We attached Cre with different degradation tags, which could be used according to user's interest to achieve optimal recombination efficiency. 2) We placed MMLV-RT under different IPTG-inducible promoters, which provides a range of different steady-state expression levels for various experimental purposes. 3) We included additional regulatory sequences (e.g. native primer binding site and poly-purine tract) required for the initiation and completion of reverse transcription. 4) To eliminate self-excision of Cre and promote recombination efficiency, we included a set of incompatible loxP sites. 5) We provide testing plasmids for system verification and optimization. In summary, our part collection provides a complete set for assembly, test, and optimization of continuous mutagenesis in different prokaryotic hosts.



project summary
Project by Team:Fudan-TSI

Mutation library generation is critical for biological and medical research, but current methods cannot mutate a specific sequence continuously without manual intervention. We hereby present a toolbox for in vivo continuous mutation library construction. First, the target DNA is transcribed into RNA. Next, our reverse transcriptase (RT) reverts RNA into cDNA, during which the target is randomly mutated by our RT's enhanced error-prone ability. Finally, the mutated version replaces the original sequence through recombination. These steps will be carried out iteratively, generating a random mutation library of the target with high efficiency as mutations accumulate along with bacterial growth. Our toolbox is orthogonal and provides a wide range of applications among various species. R-Evolution could mutate coding sequences and regulatory sequences, which enables the evolution of individual proteins or multiple targets at a time, promotes high-throughput research, and serves as a foundational advance to synthetic biology.