Team:ETH Zurich/Infoproc
From 2013.igem.org
Information processing and project overview
Our game Colisweeper is played on an agar mine-field, which is a petridish with E.coli colonies. Some of these colonies are mines and others non-mines. The mines serve as the sender cells and the non-mines serve as the receiver cells.
Signal origin: The sender cells secrete the signaling molecule 3-oxo-N-hexanoyl-L-homoserine lactone
(AHL) by constitutive LuxI production. This signal serves as the means of communication via quorum sensing between mine colonies and non-mine colonies.
Pre-Processing: The agar minefield consists of mine and non-mine colonies in a honey-comb grid. The colonies are placed on the edges of each hexagon, except the center. This way, each colony is restricted to three neighboring colonies. The senders secrete the signalling molecule AHL that diffuses through the agar. Depending on the amount of diffused AHL that is processed in the non-mines, different possible outcomes indicate the number of mines: 0 mines, 1 mine and 2 mines around (to find out more on the grid pattern, please click here). In the receiver cells, the signaling molecule forms a complex with the inactive LuxR to form an active complex AHL-LuxR.
Processing: Diffused AHL molecules from the sender cells are processed in the non-mines via PLuxR promoters with different AHL sensitivities. The interaction between the AHL with the AHL-sensitive promoters is translated into expression of different enzyme
orthogonal hydrolases .
Optimization: Proof-of-principle experiments with sender-receiver set-up and GFP as the reporter suggested leakiness in our system. To reduce the leakiness, we optimized our system (Please see the optimization part for more details).
Player interaction : To play the game, the player pippetes a substrate-mix on a colony, which leads to a color change of the colony. This gives the player information to logically carry out the next move in the game. The left click in the computer game corresponds to pipetting a multi-substrate mix on the colony in the bio-game. To mimic the flagging option of right clicking in the bio-game, the player can flag a colony by adding either a flagging solution that turns a colony into green color or by adding the Remazol blue dye. If the dye is added on to a flagged colony, the player can revert the flag to unflgagged colony by adding an enzyme laccase that removes the color. For more details please click here
Output: Addition of the playing solution (multi-substrate mix)/flagging solution(single substrate) gives color within minutes due to conversion of the specific substrates by the hydrolases that indicates the identity of the played colony. The color output is based on an overlay of different expressed hydrolases in the different situations.