Ellis:Research
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Project Members: ''Tom Ellis''<br> | Project Members: ''Tom Ellis''<br> | ||
The availability of gene synthesis is increasing rapidly, yet there is no straightforward lab-bench method to arrange modular gene units into larger assemblies with pre-defined positions. In this project we will demonstrate a new method to rapidly assemble gene units in a pre-defined order and showcase the technique to combinatorially assemble a synthetic lycopene synthesis pathway in yeast. The modular gene units in the lycopene synthesis pathway are driven by regulated promoters from a pre-existing library, and combinatorial assembly with these will produce pathways with a variety of metabolic fluxes. As well as demonstrating a rapid new assembly technique, the project will yield a synthetic yeast with high lycopene production. | The availability of gene synthesis is increasing rapidly, yet there is no straightforward lab-bench method to arrange modular gene units into larger assemblies with pre-defined positions. In this project we will demonstrate a new method to rapidly assemble gene units in a pre-defined order and showcase the technique to combinatorially assemble a synthetic lycopene synthesis pathway in yeast. The modular gene units in the lycopene synthesis pathway are driven by regulated promoters from a pre-existing library, and combinatorial assembly with these will produce pathways with a variety of metabolic fluxes. As well as demonstrating a rapid new assembly technique, the project will yield a synthetic yeast with high lycopene production. | ||
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| + | '''Bottom-up design of orthogonal E.coli promoters'''<br> | ||
| + | Project Type: ''Foundational''<br> | ||
| + | Project Members: ''Fabio Chizzolini''<br> | ||
| + | Synthetic biology has made great advances in its first decade but the complexity of devices has not exploded exponentially as expected. One of the major reasons for this is the lack of different parts, and specifically a dearth of regulated promoters is holding synthetic biology back. In ''E.coli'' our understanding of these promoters is advancing fast enough to consider building them up from scratch, but where do we start? In this project we will evolve a new ''orthogonal'' promoter system that uses a mutated Sigma Factor and mutated core promoter DNA sequence, so that these designer promoters are only recognised by the designer sigma factor under our control. This will lay the foundation for building a whole set of 'synthetic biology ONLY' promoters and devices that can sit in cells and yet only have limited interaction with the host cell systems. | ||
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'''Part characterisation for thermophilic bacteria'''<br> | '''Part characterisation for thermophilic bacteria'''<br> | ||
Revision as of 06:26, 23 September 2010
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