Team:Tuebingen/Project
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<p style="padding:0.5em" align="justify">Contraceptives contain progestins as main active components. Excreted progestins are not eliminated from the purified water in sewage treatment plants thus accumulate in nearby rivers with concentrations up to 15 ng/L water. Unfortunately fish synthesize progestin themselves and use this hormone for the regulation of various processes – contaminant progestins may therefore disrupt these regulation equilibriums and for example cause the masculinization of female fish. To this date few quick and cheap measurement methods for environmental progestins are available hence we decided to devise an easy-to-use yeast-based measurement-system that employs reliable progestin membrane-receptors derived from Danio rerio and Xenopus leavis. These receptors efficiently detect various contaminant progestins due to their low specificity; due to their peripheral localization there is no slowing lag-time thus quick responses are expected. Once progestin binds to the G-protein coupled receptors they start inhibiting the fet3 promotor which in turn regulates a repressor-protein that represses the following promotors (anb1 and suc2). In that way the receptor-signal is inverted. However, Panb1 / Psuc2 regulates the downstream reporter-gen Luciferase or lacZ. By using these reporters we can easily create optical signals that can be analyzed qualitatively without additional equipment or quantified via a spectrometer.</p> | <p style="padding:0.5em" align="justify">Contraceptives contain progestins as main active components. Excreted progestins are not eliminated from the purified water in sewage treatment plants thus accumulate in nearby rivers with concentrations up to 15 ng/L water. Unfortunately fish synthesize progestin themselves and use this hormone for the regulation of various processes – contaminant progestins may therefore disrupt these regulation equilibriums and for example cause the masculinization of female fish. To this date few quick and cheap measurement methods for environmental progestins are available hence we decided to devise an easy-to-use yeast-based measurement-system that employs reliable progestin membrane-receptors derived from Danio rerio and Xenopus leavis. These receptors efficiently detect various contaminant progestins due to their low specificity; due to their peripheral localization there is no slowing lag-time thus quick responses are expected. Once progestin binds to the G-protein coupled receptors they start inhibiting the fet3 promotor which in turn regulates a repressor-protein that represses the following promotors (anb1 and suc2). In that way the receptor-signal is inverted. However, Panb1 / Psuc2 regulates the downstream reporter-gen Luciferase or lacZ. By using these reporters we can easily create optical signals that can be analyzed qualitatively without additional equipment or quantified via a spectrometer.</p> | ||
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As said before we hope to construct a cost-efficient, easy-to-use, and quick measurement system for contaminant progestin in rivers or lakes. We will use the remaining time until October to maximize the usability of our system in order that only minimum staff-training is required before reliable quantitative measurements can be conducted. | As said before we hope to construct a cost-efficient, easy-to-use, and quick measurement system for contaminant progestin in rivers or lakes. We will use the remaining time until October to maximize the usability of our system in order that only minimum staff-training is required before reliable quantitative measurements can be conducted. | ||
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Revision as of 18:36, 7 August 2013
Project
Project description
Contraceptives contain progestins as main active components. Excreted progestins are not eliminated from the purified water in sewage treatment plants thus accumulate in nearby rivers with concentrations up to 15 ng/L water. Unfortunately fish synthesize progestin themselves and use this hormone for the regulation of various processes – contaminant progestins may therefore disrupt these regulation equilibriums and for example cause the masculinization of female fish. To this date few quick and cheap measurement methods for environmental progestins are available hence we decided to devise an easy-to-use yeast-based measurement-system that employs reliable progestin membrane-receptors derived from Danio rerio and Xenopus leavis. These receptors efficiently detect various contaminant progestins due to their low specificity; due to their peripheral localization there is no slowing lag-time thus quick responses are expected. Once progestin binds to the G-protein coupled receptors they start inhibiting the fet3 promotor which in turn regulates a repressor-protein that represses the following promotors (anb1 and suc2). In that way the receptor-signal is inverted. However, Panb1 / Psuc2 regulates the downstream reporter-gen Luciferase or lacZ. By using these reporters we can easily create optical signals that can be analyzed qualitatively without additional equipment or quantified via a spectrometer.