IGEM team meeting notes 3/31/14
iGEM planning 3/31/14 (copied from Ashley’s notes, https://www.evernote.com/shard/s68/sh/0d4b54dd-80df-4481-b4f4-078279c4eb38/f3272686cb3b7a3876ff8887e2d962a1)
What makes yeast competent? e.g. http://www.bio-protocol.org/wenzhang.aspx?id=96
Background:
milk optimized to have as much fats, calcium, liquids as possible at the same time while still remaining liquid; in stomach turns into a gel that sits there, giving nutrients time to get into body
~dozen proteins in milk
whey vs casein protein
cow’s milk, 80% casein & 20% whey
alpha s1 ~ 32% alpha s2 ~ 8% beta ~ 32% kappa ~ 8% but K is what’s responsible for coagulation (turning into gel in stomach)
all hydrophobic so do not want to stay in soln in H2O
Ca2+ tends to precipitate out proteins
K casein: AA 169
N terminus is the hydrophobic end, C terminus is soluble part
hydrophilic tail has negative charges
Histidine residues + Nickel cation…..create a fake micelle (Craig)
drop in pH (naturally occurs in stomach)…burst of H+, cancels negative charges, collapses tails
loss of k casein results in hydrophobic micelles which cluster together and become complex micelle structures capable of capturing fat globules
need to read up more on the role of Calcium
two micelles sticking together involves irreversible changes….interactions between different casein proteins
calcium phosphate inside micelle
recombinant chymosin (Marc has purified chymosin already)
https://microbewiki.kenyon.edu/index.php/Microbial_production_of_recombinant_chymosin
sinerisis: how much liquid a gel weeps out
rennet: coagulation (protein degrading) enzymes; derived from ruminant stomachs
review proteinase, protease, proteolytic enzymes all members of aspartic proteinase
after cleaving, N-terminal side is para-K casein
CMP is soluble, does not get coagulated into cheese, gets processed out with whey proteins
soluble tail from k-casein - possible to attach it….. tricks to be able to maximize protein production? other types of casing co-expressed with K-casein to form micelles
AA 105-106 (very vulnerable to aspartic proteinases) hydrophilic tail ends @ AA 169
Do micelles form spontaneously or are they dependent on milk ducts?
micelles are 200 nm - 2 um
Plan of attack:
one group replicating Kim paper and putting that in BioBrick format (this alone is sufficient for iGEM project)
another group try and express full-length K casein (more difficult due to hydrophobic head)
third group working on other 3 types of caseins to see if they can be expressed at all; at the very least make the bio bricks for these proteins
possible fourth group: modification of lipid biosynthesis pathways in yeast (butter in yeast?)
Marc: take existing vegan oil (like palm oil) and see if we can fully saturate it
Craig: increase # of micelles per unit area
Marc: nutritional yeast
Patrik: bacterial modifications to cheese
possible sponsor: DNA 2.0 (***call Amanda!!) —> add to list of sponsors!!
Craig: plant cells (or plant oil) to use as
Discussion about interest in plant project…most interest in cheese project
DNA gun from glowing plant project Patrik: main hurdle is that there’s no plant expert
enzymatic vs. nonenzymatic stages of coagulation
Cheese making day!
Cheese making fundraiser; cheese making classes @ workshop weekends
acid treated cheese….basically ricotta
homogenization more of an issue than pasteurization
Marc made a cheese press: container with holes in the sides (all food safe); a piece of plastic the same size; also a hinge that’s these same size;
Patrik: easiest way to make cheese is to put yogurt in a plastic bag and let it sit/hang over night
lactic acid bacteria:
next steps:
me: add DNA 2.0 to potential sponsor list; talk to Amanda about who to contact there
cheese making day: start planning what could be made in relation to project goals
cheese making fundraiser, cheese trail, Marin
learn more about genetic engineering of yeast: shuttle vectors, etc.
involvement of DIY molecular cloning class