The beauty about death switches is that there is more than one way to design one. As a result, we have decided to design another death switch still using ccdB as the kill gene. However, the condition for cell apoptosis will be the lack of arabinose in the surrounding. The death switch we came up with is a bit more complicated than the cis-repressive and trans-activating system as it involves two repressor for a less leaky system (meaning ccdB is not expressed when it is not supposed to) that is based off the naturally occurring arabinose operon. To fully understand this device, let us examine the way the device is designed.
A kill switch based off of the naturally occurring arabinose operon. The parts used are all available as BioBricks in the iGEM registry. It is to be noted that the GFP portion of the device serve no use in this design. It was originally intended to show a successful ligation of a promoter upstream of it, but the pAraC promoter initiates the expression of araC in the reverse direction so GFP is not expressed.
In the device, a promoter for araC (pAraC) initiates the expression of the protein araC. On its own, araC is a repressor for pBAD promoter, preventing the expression of Cubitus interruptus (CI). CI is a transcription factor that would repress the pCI promoter. However, without CI, pCI functions uninhibited and codes for ccdB, thereby killing off the cell. At least, this will be what occurs in a non-laboratory setting. In the laboratory setting, scientists can add L(+) arabinose to the media used to grow the bacteria that contains the kill switch described. L(+) arabinose is a commonly occurring form of the monosaccharide arabinose that is harmless and quite easy to obtain. With the presence of L(+) arabinose (a concentration of 0.001% to 0.02% is more than sufficient), L(+) arabinose will bind onto araC and change its conformation [4]. As a result, the pBAD promoter is no longer being repressed, so CI is now expressed. With the expression of CI, the pCI promoter is subsequently repressed so that ccdB is no longer expressed. Thus, the arabinose death switch will be extremely effective as long as scientists add L(+) arabinose to media in the laboratory setting.