Team:UANL Mty-Mexico/Results
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<figcaption><span class="text-muted"><font size="2">Figure 3. Average relative fluorescence values of cultures carrying our construction (37ºC RNAT mCherry) incubated at 31 and 37ºC.</span></font> <br></figcaption> | <figcaption><span class="text-muted"><font size="2">Figure 3. Average relative fluorescence values of cultures carrying our construction (37ºC RNAT mCherry) incubated at 31 and 37ºC.</span></font> <br></figcaption> | ||
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The synthetic RNAT proved to regulate expression in response to temperature changes. Fluorescence of cultures carrying our construction increases almost 4x from 31 to 37ºC (figure 3). <br><br><center><p><a href="https://2013.igem.org/Team:UANL_Mty-Mexico/Wetlab" class="btn btn-primary"><font color="#fff">More</font></a></p></center> </div> | The synthetic RNAT proved to regulate expression in response to temperature changes. Fluorescence of cultures carrying our construction increases almost 4x from 31 to 37ºC (figure 3). <br><br><center><p><a href="https://2013.igem.org/Team:UANL_Mty-Mexico/Wetlab" class="btn btn-primary"><font color="#fff">More</font></a></p></center> </div> | ||
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Revision as of 06:05, 27 October 2013
Results at a glance
Figure 1 shows the predicted secondary structures of the two synthetic RNATs implemented in our project (designed by Neupert et al. and iGEM TuDelft 2008, respectively). So far, we detected fluorescence only with the 37ºC responsive RNAT, which controls mCherry's translation.
Figure 2 shows the visual appearance of cultures grown at 37ºC containing Part:BBa_K1140006 (37ºC RNAT_mCherry construction) (figure 2a), a non-fluorescent control (figure 2b), and a standard constitutively expressing RFP (figure 2c)
The synthetic RNAT proved to regulate expression in response to temperature changes. Fluorescence of cultures carrying our construction increases almost 4x from 31 to 37ºC (figure 3).
Surprisingly, we obtained different behaviors in clones transformed with the same DNA (figure 4). We identified variations in plasmid copy number as the potential cause of phenotypic discrepancies among clones.
Mathematically, we found that a simple gaussian function fits our data well, and it provides us a way to quantify the strength (amplitude), optimal value (horizontal shift), and definition or clearness (width) of our RNAT activity (figure 5). It also allows for comparisons between different RNAT, as well as being potentially predictive for non verified temperatures.