Team:Glendale CC AZ/Project

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Contents

Background

Overview

Desert areas, making up almost one-quarter of the Earth surface, are home to 500 million people. As a result of human habitation, every continent in the world except Antarctica is increasingly and adversely affected by desertification. Studies forecasting climate trends indicate that desert regions will face an even drier future – in regard to both climatic factors and drought conditions – stemming from the influence of human activities. One human-created impact on these desert environments is pollution. Many remediation challenges exist specific to the extremely dry conditions present in these arid locales. For example, what happens when a desert area is polluted with such substances as plastics, where commonly employed bioremediation agents used for environmental cleanup cannot survive desert climates’ high temperature and low humidity extremes? Our team has developed a kit containing biological components that will provide desiccation resistance to organisms used to facilitate the elimination of contaminants, like plastics, in desert-like environments. Our goal is to design an assortment of complementary parts, which will strengthen organisms and help to broaden their climatic and geographic range of effectiveness. While some parts included in our kit could, conceivably, provide resistance to other types of stresses, such as ionizing radiation, we will initially focus on desiccation. Because of its potential to expand the extent of the efficacy of these biological breakdown expedients into even climatically extreme territories, our kit could be a valuable addition to any bioremediation project.

Growing Desert

Desert regions are currently found scattered around the globe, but, with the advent of global warming, both the boundaries of these regions and the appearance of new areas that could be seen as “desert-like” are increasing at a rapid rate. Rainfall is predicted to decrease by as much as 20% by the end of the century, causing water sources to be depleted and wells to run dry, ultimately resulting in the death of plants and animals. Consequently, humans will migrate to more climatically hospitable locations, which, in short order, has the likelihood of creating the very same problems in these newly habited areas not previously impacted by desertification, thus perpetuating a vicious cycle of depletion, desiccation, and death. Irrigation used for agriculture may, in the long term, lead to soil with salinity levels too high to support plants. Higher temperatures can also produce an increasing number of wildfires, which alter desert landscapes through the elimination of slow-growing trees and shrubs, followed by an influx of highly flammable fuel in the form of fast-growing grasses. In addition, as glaciers, which provide a large portion of the water used for agricultural and domestic purposes in the deserts of the southwestern United States, South America, and Central Asia, continue to melt, the loss of these ancient sources threatens to further limit water availability in these regions. Glaciers keep melting which threatens water availability in some areas.

Threatened Desert

Wet Lab

Overview

In the past, other teams (Osaka, University College London) have explored the mechanisms of the bacteria Deinococcus radiodurans that provide resilience against high levels of radiation, salinity and oxidative stress . From here, the project first aims to determine... Secondly, we will explore a similar bacteria, Deinococcus hopiensis, as a novel source of these genes within the Deinococcus genus. For this purpose the project then uses the genes to transform a desiccation stress sensitive E. coli to improve the robustness of the cells against that particular stressors. Thirdly,...

Experiments

PprI

In 2011, Osaka team reported success increasing ionizing radiation resistance in E. coli by transforming the bacteria with PprI, the transcriptional regulator involved in the expression of many DNA damage response proteins in Deinococcus radiodurans. In order to determine if PprI would also increase desiccation resistance in E. coli, our team decided to perform a series of experiments . To begin the project, the PprI expression device was ordered from the IGEM parts registry. This biobrick, identified as part BBa_K602005, features LacI constitutive promoter (R0010), transcriptional regulator PprI (K602000) and ribosome binding site (B0034). In addition to the PprI expression device, our team had other candidates biobricks for our experiments that were ordered at the same time. We received all the biobricks in the form of agar stabs that were inoculated into LB/chloramphenicol liquid media. The liquid cultures were incubated overnight at 37ºC. The next step was to isolate the plasmid from the chassi, E. coli strain NBE 10β thus miniprep (link to protocols) was performed. The products were run on a flash gel (link to data) verifying that we had the correct plasmid. After the verification step, we designed growth curves experiments using sodium chloride (NaCl) as the DNA damaging agent (link to data). For the NaCl growth experiments (link to protocols), we used liquid cultures that were inoculated with cells from the agar stabs received from IGEM. The experimental group was E. coli transformed with BBa_K602005 while the control group was the same strain of E. coli but transformed with BBa_K602003. Registry part BBa_K602003 was used as the control group because it features only the coding sequence of RecA, a component of the DNA double-strand break repair mechanism in Deinococcus radiodurans. Since the plasmid had IPTG-induced promoter, cultures containing no IPTG were used as control groups as well.

Data and Results