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New plasmids for low-noise gene expression at AddGene

December 04, 2018

New plasmids from the lab are now available at AddGene. First, a collection of plasmids for RNA imaging in E. coli using the coat protein from the bacteriophage PP7 fused to different fluorescent proteins. These are based on work from a few papers from Robert Singer’s lab, and make it possible to observe single RNAs containing tandem repeats of a specific sequence with either a cyan or red fluorescent protein. Second, plasmids from João Silva’s Masters project are available for low-noise gene expression. See more information on those in this Twitter thread:

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Congratulations to João Silva on finishing his thesis

September 27, 2018

Congrats to João Silva submitted his thesis today on “Engineering low-noise gene expression systems for single-molecule experiments”. João developed new gene-expression plasmids that are compatible with ones that we previously reported. He showed that LacI/IPTG can work just as well as TetR/tetracycline, and that the systems can be moved to a compatible plasmid backbone with lower copy number. The plasmids are on their way to AddGene. The image shows how expression can be tuned to have low noise with only a few hundred molecules per cell in order to see spots that are labeled with a couple dozen molecules above background.

Joao's low noise strain

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Debut of the single molecule microbiology lab

September 12, 2018

In the first selected talk for the group, Zach presented recent work by the Single Molecule Microbiology lab on new techniques for single mRNA imaging at the 84th Harden Conference on Single Molecule Bacteriology at Oxford University. His talk was titled “Improved tools for single-molecule mRNA and protein detection in living E. coli.”

Zach

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Welcome to Sara

May 29, 2018

Welcome to Sara Costa who recently joined the lab and presented her project today for the MolBioS PhD Program! Sara is co-supervised by Mariana Pinho. Her project is “Understanding the role of gene expression regulation in controlling cell division in Staphylococcus aureus.”

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