Team:TU Darmstadt/Model

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Introduction

Introduction

In synthetic biology, modeling is a powerful tool that uses theoretical models and computational approaches to predict, improve and further understand experiments. This year, modeling turned out to be one of the crucial cornerstones of our project due to the cancelled lab time.
Over the course of the project, it became increasingly clear that we wouldn’t be able to test out our project in the laboratory , which meant for us to adapt to the current situation and focus on different aspects of our project such as the modeling part. In this context, we built a total of three distinct models to gain further insights into the underlying biochemistry of our wastewater treatment approach:
We used the Rosetta Commons Software [1] developed by Baker Lab as well as the computational power of the Lichtenberg high-performance-computer at the TU Darmstadt to predict enzyme structures , test their stability and predict enzyme-ligand-interactions. We wrote a python program based on the work of B. Qin et al [2] to simulate the growth mechanics and -conditions of our biofilm in cooperation with the modeling team from iGEM Hannover as well as an ODE-based MATLAB-model [3] to conceptually represent the functionality of our kill switch .
Since we weren’t able to include any self-generated data into our models this year, we hope that future iGEM teams can be inspired to use and fill them with life by expanding on them and implementing their own parameters. Our biofilm model can be used to describe biofilms built by other bacteria than B. subtilis simply by utilizing the values that describe those best. This also holds true for the kill switch model, which can be adapted to different biofilm-related systems if given the right data.
The described models can be further examined on the following pages.


Benefits for our project

Benefits for our project


Enzyme Modeling:

Biofilm modeling:

kill switch modeling:

References

[1]https://www.rosettacommons.org/ (accessed 22.10.2020) [2]Cell position fates and collective fountain flow in bacterial biofilms revealed by light-sheet microscopy, B. Qin et al., Science 10.1126/science.abb8501, 2020 [3]MATLAB and SimBiology Toolbox 2020a, The MathWorks, Inc., Natick, Massachusetts, United States.