McGill

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(Project Overview)
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Both the quorum-sensing Oscillator and the Repressilator, though observed in a micro scale in our system, are important in helping understand time-varying conditions in the form of extrinsic driving from the environment and intrinsic rhythms generated within an organism itself. This includes specialized rhythm generators functioning in a coherent oscillatory state such as the cardiac pacemaker, also known as the sinoatrial node in mammalian hearts, and the circadian clock residing at the suprachiasmatic nuclei in mammalian brains. <br>
Both the quorum-sensing Oscillator and the Repressilator, though observed in a micro scale in our system, are important in helping understand time-varying conditions in the form of extrinsic driving from the environment and intrinsic rhythms generated within an organism itself. This includes specialized rhythm generators functioning in a coherent oscillatory state such as the cardiac pacemaker, also known as the sinoatrial node in mammalian hearts, and the circadian clock residing at the suprachiasmatic nuclei in mammalian brains. <br>
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[[McGill/Project Description|Project Description]]<br>
[[McGill/Project Description|Project Description]]<br>

Revision as of 13:39, 9 August 2007

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The official wiki of the McGill University iGEM 2007 team of Montreal, Quebec, Canada

Project Overview

Quorum-sensing coupled with the Repressilator

Our project is a continuation of one of the projects we presented last year: a two-gene oscillator, with an 'On' switch - LuxI gene, and an 'Off' switch - LacI, with a Cyan fluorescent protein bound, for visualization. This system works via the method of quorum-sensing between the two genes, with a diffusable artificial inducer (AI) protein produced by LuxI which couples when produced, to a constitutive gene in the system, LuxR to bind to LacI to turn the system off. Once AI is produced, it can spread to other cells and continue this 'On'-'Off' oscillator in other neighbouring cells, and hence increasing synchronization across a population of genetically oscillating cells.

This year we've taken this system even further by adding several elements of control to see how they effect oscillations:

  1. By changing cell densities and observing their effect on the oscillator.
  2. Adding an AI Analog (AHL) into the system.
  3. Adding Tetracycline (DOX), an inhibitor of the LuxR promoter, to the system and observing its effect.
  4. Adding an AI inhibitor (Aiia) into the system to control the levels of AI produced.


A major enhancement to the system this year is that we plan on adding the Ojalvo, Elowitz et al. - 'Represillator' system coupled to the two-gene oscillator in a single cell. The Repressilator is a 3-gene repressing network, where each gene represses the other, and so on. In turn, this system produces very clear oscillations but is hindered by noise and instability. It is theoried that this system can become highly stabilized if coupled with the 2-gene quorum-sensing oscillator, and once working side-by-side, the 2 systems will produce highly stable, smooth, sinusoidal oscillations.

Both the quorum-sensing Oscillator and the Repressilator, though observed in a micro scale in our system, are important in helping understand time-varying conditions in the form of extrinsic driving from the environment and intrinsic rhythms generated within an organism itself. This includes specialized rhythm generators functioning in a coherent oscillatory state such as the cardiac pacemaker, also known as the sinoatrial node in mammalian hearts, and the circadian clock residing at the suprachiasmatic nuclei in mammalian brains.

Project Description
More Information
Background Papers


Please feel free to check out our work from last year at iGEM McGill 2006

In the Lab

Lab Notebook
Lab Protocols

The Team

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