Brilliant though! That's something to work with at least. There are many things that could have been affecting things to slow down light emission. Codon optimization, protein separation, bottlenecking at any stage.. perhaps by codon optimizing and directly chaining proteins we could get it working? I saw linkage at work on a B12-13 pathway once, it was well over tenfold improvement by my recollection.
Time to read that paper!
On 15 Mar 2011 21:45, "Cory Tobin" <cory....@gmail.com> wrote:> As to bioluminescent plants, from my understanding they have never yet been
Sorry to interrupt the conversation on frankenstein experiments. One
> made to glow indepen...
small correction about the plants. There was one case where someone
built the entire luciferin synthesis pathway in plants.
http://dx.plos.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0015461 (PLoS One, open
access) Unfortunately the amount of luciferin it produced was so low
they could only see the autoluminescence with a five minute exposure
in the dark. So it wasn't visually stunning :[
-cory
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Were you to engineer this for optimal expression in Chloroplasts, or
in plant cells with compartmentalisation in the chloroplast if needed
for Luciferin synthesis, you'd do a lot better. :)
On Tuesday, 15 March 2011, Cathal Garvey <cathal...@gmail.com> wrote:
> Brilliant though! That's something to work with at least. There are many things that could have been affecting things to slow down light emission. Codon optimization, protein separation, bottlenecking at any stage.. perhaps by codon optimizing and directly chaining proteins we could get it working? I saw linkage at work on a B12-13 pathway once, it was well over tenfold improvement by my recollection.
>
> Time to read that paper!
> On 15 Mar 2011 21:45, "Cory Tobin" <cory....@gmail.com> wrote:
>
>> As to bioluminescent plants, from my understanding they have never yet been
>> made to glow indepen...Sorry to interrupt the conversation on frankenstein experiments. One
> small correction about the plants. There was one case where someone
> built the entire luciferin synthesis pathway in plants.
> http://dx.plos.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0015461 (PLoS One, open
> access) Unfortunately the amount of luciferin it produced was so low
> they could only see the autoluminescence with a five minute exposure
> in the dark. So it wasn't visually stunning :[
>
>
> -cory
>
> --
> You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups "DIYbio" group.
> To post to...
>
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On Tuesday, 15 March 2011, Cathal Garvey <cathal...@gmail.com> wrote:
> Brilliant though! That's something to work with at least. There are many things that could have been affecting things to slow down light emission. Codon optimization, protein separation, bottlenecking at any stage.. perhaps by codon optimizing and directly chaining proteins we could get it working? I saw linkage at work on a B12-13 pathway once, it was well over tenfold improvement by my recollection.
>
> Time to read that paper!
> On 15 Mar 2011 21:45, "Cory Tobin" <cory....@gmail.com> wrote:
>
>> As to bioluminescent plants, from my understanding they have never yet been
>> made to glow indepen...Sorry to interrupt the conversation on frankenstein experiments. One
> small correction about the plants. There was one case where someone
> built the entire luciferin synthesis pathway in plants.
> http://dx.plos.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0015461 (PLoS One, open
> access) Unfortunately the amount of luciferin it produced was so low
> they could only see the autoluminescence with a five minute exposure
> in the dark. So it wasn't visually stunning :[
>
>
> -cory
>
> --
> You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups "DIYbio" group.
> To post to...
>
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Is there a way to find out how much luciferin we'll need to buy?
Anyone knows where to get the cheapest beetle luciferin??
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That needs a robust design to conduct experiment with.luxgene
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The sequencing is GOING to be sequenced sometime soon according to some colleagues of mine working with fungi, not has been done already. My apologies. Current sequences are just partial 18s ribosomal subunits. I can’t seem to find any work done on isolating the lux genes from pSTIP (should be name of plasmid once you/we do isolate it :P). North American strains, to the best of my knowledge, are the only ones who do glow but there can be some variations between strains that lead to a total lack of glow. Inhibitors are unknown. Heredity of glow genes is known and is a dominant trait. Other than that there is a suspicious silence in the r and d area for p. stipticus.
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Can you snag a sample and grow it on wood chips? J
From: diy...@googlegroups.com [mailto:diy...@googlegroups.com] On Behalf Of Dakota Hamill
Sent: Tuesday, August 21, 2012 10:29 AM
To: diy...@googlegroups.com
Subject: Re: [DIYbio] Re: Engineering Plant Bioluminescence (was Re: experimentation)
I was just wondering about the genome of that as well, in the context of...say you get a sample of the fungi, how the heck do you pull out the genes you want?
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Well it looks like they aren't jack-o-lanter's or waxy caps, but http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mycena_leaiana They were growing exactly as described, on a deciduous log in a tight clump. I need to make use of those fungal primers I got..So...possibly no glowThey did leave an orangey dye stain on my gloves after I was handling them, and from the wiki it says it has mild antibiotic properties, cool stuff.
--
Brilliant though! That's something to work with at least. There are many things that could have been affecting things to slow down light emission. Codon optimization, protein separation, bottlenecking at any stage.. perhaps by codon optimizing and directly chaining proteins we could get it working? I saw linkage at work on a B12-13 pathway once, it was well over tenfold improvement by my recollection.
Time to read that paper!
On 15 Mar 2011 21:45, "Cory Tobin" <cory....@gmail.com> wrote:> As to bioluminescent plants, from my understanding they have never yet been
Sorry to interrupt the conversation on frankenstein experiments. One
> made to glow indepen...
small correction about the plants. There was one case where someone
built the entire luciferin synthesis pathway in plants.
http://dx.plos.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0015461 (PLoS One, open
access) Unfortunately the amount of luciferin it produced was so low
they could only see the autoluminescence with a five minute exposure
in the dark. So it wasn't visually stunning :[
-cory
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That would mean, the firefly Luc gene is always present in each colen, and additionally, when the gene for luciferin is present within the restriction fragment, it will make the transformed plant glow then.
Using plants because they are eukaryotic, it may not work in bacteria due to compartimentization. Or would that work better in bacteria, beause everything stays more or less in the cytosol?
AFAI remember, the 35S Promoter gives *some* expression in bacteria too. But the promoter of the Luciferin gene(s) may not work in bacteria...
Just some thoughts...
I just searched for the genome sequence of firefly. Didn't find any results.... Has this never been done?What about this: Why not make a genomic library of firefly in Agrobacterium Ti plasmid pGreenII 0049: http://www.pgreen.ac.uk/JIT/pGreenII/T-0049.gif
that you can get insect genes to express in a bacteria, that they get the correct posttranslational modification to be active, that all the genes for the luciferin biosynthesis pathway are adjacent, and close enough together to fit in the bacteria in one piece, and that the bacteria has the right metabolic precursors available.
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> However, maybe, just maybe som leaky expression would be enough...Have you got a citation for that? I was under the impression that
> 1 Photon needs just one ATP when using firefly luciferase instead
> of 60 ATPs for bacterial luminescence!
bacterial bioluminescence was in the 90-100% efficiency?
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