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Full-Text Articles in Molecular Biology
Developing Regulated Crispr Systems To Control Bacterial Microbiomes, Gregory M. Pellegrino
Developing Regulated Crispr Systems To Control Bacterial Microbiomes, Gregory M. Pellegrino
Electronic Thesis and Dissertation Repository
Changes to the human microbiome’s composition and metabolome are associated with numerous diseases and alterations to xenobiotic metabolism. As such, targeting the human microbiome is an increasingly popular option for therapeutic interventions. However, traditional therapies that target the microbiome such as antibiotics lack specificity, which can affect the beneficial species of the microbiome and cause adverse health outcomes such as the rise of antimicrobial-resistant bacteria. Therefore, the research and development of specific, targeted antimicrobial therapies is crucial to effectively treating microbiome dysbioses.
CRISPR and CRISPRi provide easily modifiable, RNA-guided mechanisms mediated by the Cas9 or dCas9 enzymes to induce sequence-specific …
Advances In Phaeodactylum Tricornutum Nuclear Engineering, Mark Pampuch
Advances In Phaeodactylum Tricornutum Nuclear Engineering, Mark Pampuch
Electronic Thesis and Dissertation Repository
The marine diatom Phaeodactylum tricornutum has the potential to become an excellent platform for the sustainable production of valuable compounds and pharmaceuticals, but currently large-scale engineering of this organism remains a challenge due factors like inefficient genetic transformation protocols and a lack of accurate genomic data. This thesis addresses these two bottlenecks by (i) optimizing an electroporation protocol to P. tricornutum and (ii) remapping genomic data from a scaffolded genome assembly to a telomere-to-telomere genome assembly. An optimized transformation protocol was developed that could consistently transform blunt-ended and DNA with overhangs and yielded up to 1000+ colony forming units per …
Functionalizing Conjugative Systems To Deliver Crispr Nucleases For Targeted Bacterial Killing, Thomas A. Hamilton
Functionalizing Conjugative Systems To Deliver Crispr Nucleases For Targeted Bacterial Killing, Thomas A. Hamilton
Electronic Thesis and Dissertation Repository
The interactions between humans and microbes are intimately important to human health, with both commensal and pathogenic bacteria affecting homeostasis and disease. Increasing concern over antibiotic resistance in bacterial pathogens represents a significant threat to human health, and use of traditional antibiotics to treat infections can be detrimental to commensal bacteria as well as pathogens, demonstrating a need for more specific antibacterial reagents. RNA-guided CRISPR nucleases, which can target and cleave genomes of interest, are a potential tool for specific bacterial targeting. A key limitation to the use of CRISPR antimicrobials is effective and robust delivery to the target bacteria. …
Implications And Applications Of Transfer Rna Variants That Mistranslate The Genetic Code, Matthew D. Berg
Implications And Applications Of Transfer Rna Variants That Mistranslate The Genetic Code, Matthew D. Berg
Electronic Thesis and Dissertation Repository
Genetic information is passed from DNA to RNA to protein through the processes of transcription and translation. Transfer RNAs (tRNA) are the adaptors that bring amino acids to the growing polypeptide chain during translation and decode the three base codons that define protein sequence. Mistranslation occurs when an amino acid different from what is specified by the genetic code is inserted into a protein. tRNA variants cause mistranslation by decreasing the accuracy of amino acid charging or by altering decoding at the ribosome. My goal was to characterize mistranslating tRNA variants, identify their effects on cells and determine mechanisms used …
Practical Applications And Future Directions Of Genetic Code Expansion: Validation Of Novel Akt1 Substrates And The Design Of A Synthetic Auxotroph Strain Of B. Subtilis, Mcshane M. Mckenna
Practical Applications And Future Directions Of Genetic Code Expansion: Validation Of Novel Akt1 Substrates And The Design Of A Synthetic Auxotroph Strain Of B. Subtilis, Mcshane M. Mckenna
Electronic Thesis and Dissertation Repository
In Chapter 1, site-specifically phosphorylated variants of the oncogene Akt1 were made in Escherichia coli using the orthogonal translation system that enable genetic code expansion with phosphoserine. The differentially phosphorylated variants of Akt1 were used to validate newly predicted Akt1 substrates. The predicted target sites of the peptide substrates were synthesized and subjected to in vitro kinase assays to quantify the activity of each Akt1 phosphorylated variant towards the predicted peptide. A previously uncharacterized kinase-substrate interaction between Akt1 and a peptide derived from RAB11 Family Interacting Protein 2 (RAB11FIP2) was validated in vitro. Chapter 2 describes the preliminary development of …