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I think you guys are barking up the wrong tree, if you are trying to
convert in-cell toxin/antitoxins into allelopathic antibiotics to kill
neighbouring cells. There's too much work trying to get that hack to
work, for the same base-pair length you'd probably do the same with a
bacteriocin antibiotic.
As bacteriocins often encode "immunity" genes rather than
antibiotic-degrading "resistance" genes, they also sidestep the issue
of destroying-your-own-antibiotic, which would be a very costly
problem with, say, Kanamycin.
All this is a bit moot though if you choose a novel means of *initial*
selection. If you use Hok/Sok to ensure plasmid maintenance within
transformants, then your primary issue is how to initially isolate
transformants from a background of untransformed neighbours. There are
lots of clever ways you could try to achieve that; perhaps using
antifreeze proteins and freeze/thaw cycling, or a UV-resistance system
and a consumer-grade UV "sterilisation" wand, or something like that.
The goal is to have two systems working in parallel; one to allow
isolation of resistant cells, and another to ensure maintenance of the
plasmid once you've transformed it into cells. Both should be as small
as you can manage to enable larger inserts in your plasmid for other
interesting stuff.
Remember, by the way, that Restriction Enzyme systems behave selfishly
too, similarly to hok/sok. It takes lots of methylases to protect a
genome, but only one restriction enzyme to cleave up an unmethylated
site, so plasmid loss tends to lead to genome destruction as
methylases become rare and remaining restriction enzymes can start
targeting new DNA as it is made. That's behind one of the popular
lines of thought on how they became so diverse; selfish
self-maintaining behaviour allows evolution to take place.
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