Team:BV CAPS Kansas

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Welcome to CAPS

Biofuels
Alkanes, the primary component in diesel, are one class of molecules that cyanobacteria can synthesize. Furthermore, alkanes excreted from the cell then float on the surface of water, making harvesting of alkanes efficient and fairly simple through dewatering. Like other fatty-acid-derived products, acetyl-CoA is the initiation point for synthesis of alkanes. In a photosynthetic system such as cyanobacteria, acetyl-CoA is formed from pyruvate, which is the end product of glycolysis. Since pyruvate kinase catalyzes the final step in glycolysis (the conversion of phosphoenolpyruvate (PEP) to pyruvate), this enzyme is a common regulatory point of glycolysis in most organisms. Because the production of pyruvate provides the initial carbon source for lipid and alkane synthesis, we hypothesize that increasing the enzymatic activity of pyruvate kinase will increase the cellular concentration of pyruvate and thus increase the production of alkanes by the cell.

In order to increase alkane production, we will insert a more activate pyruvate kinase gene in cyanobacteria (Synechocystis PCC 6803) in a broad host range plasmid (part BBa_K12500). The system could then be measured for pyruvate and alkanes through gas chromatography and a lipid profiling assay.


Official Team Profile


Contents

Team

Blue Valley Center of Advanced Professional Studies (CAPS) is an outreach facility for students who wish to achieve higher goals and expectations in a professional environment. The team is composed of students from the Blue Valley district high schools giving us an array of students with different backgrounds and abilities.

Click here to see our team members.

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Project


Click here to see the monthly lab notebooks.

Results/Conclusions


What did you achieve over the course of your semester?

Safety


What safety precautions did your team take? Did you take a safety training course? Were you supervised at all times in the lab?

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[1] CAPS Bioscience Lab Safety Manual

Attributions


Who worked on what?

Team Members

Students

Alec Adams - The King of the Knockout Mice!
Corinne Andresen
Muriel Eaton
Dylan Geick
Austin Jacobson
Amy McClain
Mason Wilkinson


Mentors

Dr. Aron Fenton - [2]

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Instructors

Eric Kessler

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Mr. Kessler’s interest in biology can be traced to his youth on his family’s annual canoe trips where he was obsessed with catching turtles. He has earned three undergraduate degrees, in Education from UMKC, and Psychology and Zoology from the University of Texas. These studies were followed by a Masters in Biology from Emporia State University where he completed research on the retreat-site selection of woodland snakes. He complete 18 years at BVN before coming to CAPS, and maintains National Board Certification.

Kelley Tuel

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Kelley Tuel will be the instructor for this course. She is a MS Degree candidate in Biology at Emporia State University. Her thesis is on the molecular genetics of Halobacterium sp. NRC-1, a salt-loving microbe, and its instructional use in high school classrooms. For her research, she isolated and named a previously undescribed mutant strain of the bacteria possessing a novel gene that can copy and paste itself around the genome. Colonies of the bacteria are in the adjacent image. Kelley holds undergraduate degrees in Biology and Education from KSU, and has previously taught high school Biology and AP Biology.

Joe Whalen

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Mr. Whalen began his adult life in biology as a commercial fisherman in Alaska. His interest in the outdoors led him to complete an undergraduate degree in Environmental Science which he earned from the University of Kansas. From there he worked as a liaison between research and high school education as a GK-12 Fellow, and then completed three years teaching Biology, Zoology, AP Biology, and some physical science at Blue Valley High School. Before returning to CAPS he completed his Masters in Molecular and Cellular Biology at Oregon State University, where he studied genome defense mechanisms in the fungus, Fusarium graminearum. Mr. Walen is currently responsible for teaching the Bioscience Research course.

Human Practices

What impact does/will your project have on the public?

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Fun


Isn't Reading Quite Fun?


Resources


[3] Team Resources

References

General References on Biofuels

[4] Metabolic Engineering of Hydrocarbon Biosynthesis for Biofuel Production by Anne M. Ruffing

[5] Advanced biofuel production in microbes by Pamela P. Peralta-Yahya1, and Jay D. Keasling

[6] Metabolic engineering of microorganisms for biofuels production: from bugs to synthetic biology to fuels by Sung Kuk Lee, Howard Chou, Timothy S Ham, Taek Soon Lee and Jay D Keasling

[7] The path to next generation biofuels: successes and challenges in the era of synthetic biology by Clementina Dellomonaco, Fabio Fava, Ramon Gonzalez

[8] Defossiling Fuel: How Synthetic Biology Can Transform Biofuel Production by David F. Savage, Jeffrey Way, and Pamela A. Silver

[9] Metabolic Engineering for Production of Biorenewable Fuels and Chemicals: Contributions of Synthetic Biology by Laura R. Jarboe, Xueli Zhang, Xuan Wang,Jonathan C. Moore,K. T. Shanmugam,and Lonnie O. Ingram

[10] Genetic Engineering of Algae for Enhanced Biofuel Production by Randor Radakovits, Robert E. Jinkerson, Al Darzins, and Matthew C. Posewitz

[11] Synthetic Metabolism: Engineering Biology at the Protein and Pathway Scales by Collin H. Martin, David R. Nielsen, Kevin V. Solomon and Kristala L. Jones Prather

[12] ENGINEERING MICROORGANISMS FOR ENERGY PRODUCTION by Michael Brenner et. al.

[13] Jay Keasling on Biofuels - a collection of links to references, videos, etc...


Cyanobacteria and Pyruvate Kinase References

ALL NEW PAPERS!

[14] Wide-dynamic-range promoters engineered for cyanobacteria by Hsin-Ho Huang and Peter Lindblad

[15] Design and characterization of molecular tools for a Synthetic Biology approach towards developing cyanobacterial biotechnology by Hsin-Ho Huang, Daniel Camsund, Peter Lindblad and Thorsten Heidorn

[16] The Metabolic Network of Synechocystis sp. PCC 6803: Systemic Properties of Autotrophic Growth by Henning Knoop, Yvonne Zilliges, Wolfgang Lockau, and Ralf Steuer*

[17] Functions of the Duplicated hik31 Operons in Central Metabolism and Responses to Light, Dark, and Carbon Sources in Synechocystis sp. Strain PCC 6803 by Sowmya Nagarajan,Debra M. Sherman,Isaac Shaw,and Louis A. Shermana


[18] From Genome to Enzyme: Analysis of Key Glycolytic and Oxidative PentosePhosphate Pathway Enzymes in the Cyanobacterium Synechocystis sp. PCC 6803 by Vicki L. Knowles and William C. Plaxton

[19] Structural and Regulatory Properties of Pyruvate Kinase from the Cyanobacterium Synechococcus PCC 6301* by Vicki L. Knowles, Catherine S. Smith, Christopher R. Smith, and William C. Plaxton

[20] Pathway alignment: application to the comparative analysis of glycolytic enzymes by Thomas Dandekar, Stefan Schuster‹, Berend Snel‹, Martijn Huynen‹Œ and Peer Bork

[21] Sequence Analysis of the Genome of the Unicellular Cyanobacterium Synechocystis sp. Strain PCC6803. II. Sequence Determination of the Entire Genome and Assignment of Potential Protein-coding Regions by Takakazu KANEKO,Shusei SATO,Hirokazu KOTANI,Ayako TANAKA,Erika ASAMIZU,Yasukazu NAKAMURA,Nobuyuki MIYAJIMA,Makoto HIROSAWA,Masahiro SUGIURA,Shigemi SASAMOTO,Takaharu KIMURA,Tsutomu HOSOUCHI,Ai MATSUNO,Akiko MURAKI,Naomi NAKAZAKI,Kaoru NARUO,Satomi OKUMURA,Sayaka SHIMPO,Chie TAKEUCHI,Tsuyuko WADA,Akiko WATANABE,Manabu YAMADA,Miho YASUDA,and Satoshi TABATA

[22] CO2-limitation-inducible Green Recovery of fatty acids from cyanobacterial biomass by Xinyao Liu, Sarah Fallon, Jie Sheng, and Roy Curtiss III

[23] Pyruvate Kinase of the Hyperthermophilic Crenarchaeote Thermoproteus tenax: Physiological Role and Phylogenetic Aspects by ALEXANDER SCHRAMM,BETTINA SIEBERS,BRITTA TJADEN,HENNER BRINKMANN,AND REINHARD HENSEL

[24] Effect of pyruvate kinase overproduction on glucose metabolism of Lactococcus lactis by Ana Ramos, Ana Rute Neves, Rita Ventura, Christopher Maycock, Paloma Lopez and Helena Santos

[25] Oxidative Phosphorylation and Energy Buffering in Cyanobacteria by WOLFGANG H. NITSCHMANN AND GUNTER A. PESCHEK

[26] Pyruvate kinase isozymes: Ancient diversity retained in modern plant cells by Jiro Hattori, Bernard R. Baum, Sylvia G. Mchugh, Stephen D. Blakele, David T. Dennis, Brian L. Miki (just an abstract)

[27] Expression, Activation, and Biochemical Properties of a Novel Arabidopsis Protein Kinase by Deming Gong, Zhizhong Gong, Yan Guo, and Jian-Kang Zhu

[28] Synthesis of customized petroleum-replica fuel molecules by targeted modification of free fatty acid pools in Escherichia coli by Thomas P. Howard, Sabine Middelhaufe, Karen Moore, Christoph Edner, Dagmara M. Kolak, George N. Taylor, David A. Parker, Rob Lee, Nicholas Smirnoff, Stephen J. Aves, and John Love

[29] Open Wetware Synthetic Biology Course Website with information on Algal Biofuels


Synthetic Biology

[30] Engineering BioBrick vectors from BioBrick parts by Reshma P Shetty, Drew Endy and Thomas F Knight Jr

[31] Idempotent Vector Design for Standard Assembly of Biobricks by Tom Knight

[32] Caltech Synthetic Biology Journal Club


Diagrams

[33] Pathway Diagram

[34] Another Pathway Diagram

[35] A 3rd Pathway Diagram

Jansson, Christer. "Figure 1." Earth Science Division. Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory, n.d. Web. 22 May 2013. <http://esd.lbl.gov/about/staff/christerjansson/cyanofuels.html>.

Ruffing, Anne M. "Figure 3." Intech. InTech, 20 Mar. 2013. Web. 22 May 2013. <http://www.intechopen.com/books/liquid-gaseous-and-solid-biofuels-conversion-techniques/metabolic-engineering-of-hydrocarbon-biosynthesis-for-biofuel-production>.

Other Resources

[36] Tinker Cell Website

[37] David Goodsell's piece on the Glycolytic Enzymes at the Protein Databank

Wiki Editing Resources

[38] iGEM FAQ, Wiki Editing

[39] MediaWiki powers all iGEM pages, this is their help page

[40] If we get to CSS's

[41] A way to add audio to a wiki

[42] A way to add Google Maps to a wiki

[43] The code for adding an image slideshow in HTML


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