GenoCon 2

From OpenWetWare
Jump to navigationJump to search
GenoCon Genomic Design Platform
GenoCon Genomic Design Platform

Synthetic Promoter Design Challenge

Design a synthetic plant promoter sequence of 500 base-pairs or less to: 1) Localize gene expression to a specific plant tissue: roots, leaves, or stems. OR 2) Control of circadian expression or diurnal/nocturnal expression. These 500 base-pairs must be consecutive, and span the region from -51 to -550 upstream of the transcriptional start site of the GenoCon Firefly Luciferase vector reporter system. The expressed Luciferase levels will be measured in Arabidopsis thaliana as described on the Promoter Measurement page.

For more information check out Promoter Design Manuals below or jump right into the PromoterCAD software here: Official Contest

Design a plant promoter DNA sequence using the PromoterCAD software to search for functional regulatory DNA. Make a promoter which controls specific expression in a plant tissue such as leaf, stem, or root, or only at a particular time of day. Accepted DNA designs will be synthesized, transformed into real plants, and tested for gene expression!

PromoterCAD is a DNA design web application for mining plant expression and regulatory databases to create promoter architectures of *cis*-regulatory motifs. You can use PromoterCAD to mine for *cis*-regulatory motifs with a desired function, or you can enter your own motifs to the design.

The Promoter Design Challenge Extended Deadline is February 22, 2013 23:59:59 Hawaii–Aleutian Standard Time (UTC−10).

The grand prize award for Plant Promoter Design is a Dell XPS™ series 13 inch Ultrabook™ computer, courtesy of Dell Inc.

GenoCon2 FAQ (Hackpad)

Synthetic Promoter Background

Introducing synthetic genes into organisms offers enormous practical opportunities. Systems of metabolic genes can be arranged to produce useful biomass such as fuels, medicines, and plastics. Crop plants are attractive targets as such Genetically Modified Organisms because of the enormous agricultural infrastructure we have constructed for producing food–and crop plants only require water, land, sunlight, atmospheric carbon dioxide, and some source of nitrogen, phosphorus, and potassium in order to to create useful metabolic products.

However, there are social and technical difficulties for such transgenic crops. First, there is concern that ‘cash crop’ GMOs might be grown in the place of foodstuffs in areas where humans are undernourished, creating a conflict of interest for farmers who must decide each season which crop to plant. Second, the expression of many foreign genes within a plant leads to what is called ‘growth inhibition’: when the genes or their metabolic products interfere with the growth of the plant. Genes which cause even a slight reduction in plant growth can significantly reduce product yields.

Both of these difficulties might be overcome by precise control of gene expression. ‘Double crops’ could be engineered to express useful metabolites in a separate tissue than the food (such as the plant stalk), and/or to express them only after the food tissue has been harvested. How to maximize yield while avoiding growth inhibition is a general problem for expressing engineered metabolic pathways. To enable useful expression of such genes in plants, we want to control when, where, and how much of each gene is expressed. By using an appropriate genetic control system to allow expression only of pathway genes in only at a specific time and/or plant tissue, we can limit the overall toxicity.

The region up to 500 base-pairs from the start of transcription is known to contain most of the position specific transcriptional regulation in plants, due to transcription factor protein binding. Enhancers, non position specific factors often occurring even further from the promoter, are generally still effective when synthetically introduced into this region. Though many natural tissue specific promoters are known, the contribution of each transcription factor and enhancer to tissue/temporal specificity is an open research topic. A set of compact synthetic promoters with defined interactions would make a useful toolkit–both for probing spatial/temporal gene regulation, and for engineering plant metabolism. Additional background and reference information about eukaryotic promoters and synthetic promoter design may be found in the Promoter Design Manuals.

Promoter Measurement

The vector DNA contains a region for the 500 bp designed promoter controlling the expression of the firefly luciferase gene (YY Yamamoto, In preparation)

DNA vector

The synthetic promoter will be constructed in a Firefly luciferase transcriptional reporter. This advanced measurement system has been optimized for translation efficiency in Arabidopsis and produces a highly specific mRNA, so the challenge designs will only deal with the regulation of transcription. The vector supplies the minimal promoter of the 35S Cauliflower Mosaic Virus, including the required TATA box sequence, while the sequences upstream of -46 position (such as the CAAT box) will be designed by the contestants. This minimal promoter, while not sufficient for gene expression by itself, has been shown to be effective for creating chimeric regulatory promoters when connected to upstream regions from natural promoters. For the design challenge, we have included the minimal promoter in the vector to (1) encourage effective use of the 500 base-pair budget for designing the regulatory regions and (2) ensure that the transcriptional start site and resulting mRNA sequence is the same for every contestant.

Plant transformation

The designed promoter DNA controlling luciferase expression will be transformed into the higher plant Arabidopsis thalania for characterization by the RIKEN Plant Science Center. The DNA system is delivered to plant genomes by a binary vector system in Agrobacterium, including a selection marker for the transformation and a method for quantifying the copy number. For each transformation, a plate of seedlings will be evaluated to select those most promising. Individual transgenics for each design will then be grown under laboratory controlled conditions, with advanced time-lapse imaging of both plant growth and luciferase expression.

Gene expression assay

Tissue specific expression of Luciferase by different promoters in Arabidopsis (Yamamoto, Plant J 35: 273, 2003).

The experimental evaluation will employ a Firefly Luciferase transcriptional reporter system yy449. Plants will be imaged for over 48 hours. The default growth condition will be to grow for 14 days at 20 C (tissue specific) or 7 days at 20C (time specific), with standard light and dark cycles of 12 hours. Plants will be grown on standard agar medium. Measuring luciferase expression in growing plants will allow the simultaneous evaluation of several designs by the same experimental method.

Data analysis

Advanced image analysis techniques will be conducted by RIKEN BASE. Whole plant image processing will automatically recognize different plant tissues, and associate each tissue with a luciferase expression level. Images of growing plants will be processed to recognized different plant tissues, such as the green leaf, shoot meristem, and old leaves. By recording the corresponding expression value from the luciferase image, each part of the plant can be given a gene expression value over the lifetime of the plant. These values can be used to directly calculate the temporal and tissue specificity of the synthetic promoters. These experimental results will be used by GenoCon to evaluate the transgenic plants for tissue specificity, temporal regulation, and activity.

Promoter Manuals

Plant Promoter Design Tutorial (hackpad)

Tutorial for how to use the PromoterCAD software for synthetic plant promoter design, and an example of promoter design process. Start here if you want to follow an example of synthetic plant promoter design!

Plant Promoter Submission (hackpad)

Manual for submitting a promoter design to the GenoCon2 Plant Promoter Design Challenge. Use this manual if you are ready to design and submit a synthetic plant promoter!

Eukaryotic Promoters Primer (pdf)

Overview of Eukaryotic promoter structure, the assembly of the basal transcriptional apparatus, and the basic mechanism of action of regulatory transcription factors. Use this primer if you want to learn the basics of eukaryotic promoter structure. Eukaryotic Promoters–Basic Science (html version)

Promoter Annotation Workflow Tutorial (UGENE version pdf)

Tutorial for the process to find a promoter’s DNA sequence, annotate it with functional sequence elements, and upload the annotated sequence to LinkData.org so it can be accessed by the LinkDataApp. Includes automatic promoter annotation using the UGENE Workflow designer.

Promoter Annotation Workflow Tutorial (Geneious version - hackpad)

Tutorial for the process to find a promoter’s DNA sequence, annotate it with functional sequence elements, and upload the annotated sequence to LinkData.org so it can be accessed by the LinkDataApp.

about GenoCon Special Programming Challenge A

Manual for PromoterCAD Programming (PDF) Overview of the GenoCon PromoterCAD Application: the linked Data structures, the basic program modules, how to create new modules and how to register them into the application.