Team:TU-Munich/Modeling/Kill Switch

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Revision as of 22:21, 2 October 2013 by ChristopherW (Talk | contribs)


Kill Switch Modelling

Purpose

The idea of our kill switch is to kill off our moss, as soon as it leaves the filter system. For this purpose two methods were proposed:

  1. siRNA method: When some trigger is activated, siRNA is expressed to inhibiting the expression of a vital gene
  2. nuclease method: When some trigger is activated, a nuclease is released destroying the DNA of the cell

Model

To decide between these two methods we modelled the vitality V of the cell (a number between 0 and 1, so a perfectly functional cell has V=1, a dead cell V=0) and depending on the test method the concentration of siRNA and nuclease as appropriate. Both concentrations were assumed to be normalized to the unit interval [0,1].

siRNA Modell

We determined the governing equations to be the following:

TUM13 siRNA formula.png
TUM13 siRNA initial.png
TUM13 siRNA stable satisfy.png

Defining TUM13 siRNA alpha beta def.png


TUM13 siRNA stable quadratic.png
TUM13 siRNA alpha eq 1.png
TUM13 siRNA alphaIS1 stable.png
TUM13 siRNA alphaIS1 Hessian.png
TUM13 siRNA alphaIS1 EV.png
TUM13 siRNA alpha neq 1.png
TUM13 siRNA stable points.png
TUM13 siRNA stable realistic point.png

Nuclease Modell

Conclusion

For a functional kill-switch it is necessary, that the cells are actually killed completely and not just live on with reduced vitality. So based on our modelling results the siRNA approach is not satisfactory, while the nuclease satisfies the requirement. As a result the team pursued the nuclease approach leading to our final kill-switch.