8 research outputs found
Engineered Orthogonal Quorum Sensing Systems for Synthetic Gene Regulation in Escherichia coli
Gene regulators that are controlled by membrane-permeable compounds called homoserine lactones (HSLs) have become popular tools for building synthetic gene networks that coordinate behaviors across populations of engineered bacteria. Synthetic HSL-signaling systems are derived from natural DNA and protein elements from microbial quorum signaling pathways. Crosstalk, where a single HSL can activate multiple regulators, can lead to faults in networks composed of parallel signaling pathways. Here, we report an investigation of quorum sensing components to identify synthetic pathways that exhibit little to no crosstalk in liquid and solid cultures. In previous work, we characterized the response of a single regulator (LuxR) to 10 distinct HSL-synthase enzymes. Our current study determined the responses of five different regulators (LuxR, LasR, TraR, BjaR, and AubR) to the same set of synthases. We identified two sets of orthogonal synthase-regulator pairs (BjaI/BjaR + EsaI/TraR and LasI/LasR + EsaI/TraR) that show little to no crosstalk when they are expressed in Escherichia coli BL21. These results expand the toolbox of characterized components for engineering microbial communities
Design, Construction, and Validation of Histone-Binding Effectors <i>in Vitro</i> and in Cells
Chromatin is a system of nuclear
proteins and nucleic acids that
plays a pivotal role in gene expression and cell behavior and is therefore
the subject of intense study for cell development and cancer research.
Biochemistry, crystallography, and reverse genetics have elucidated
the macromolecular interactions that drive chromatin regulation. One
of the central mechanisms is the recognition of post-translational
modifications (PTMs) on histone proteins by a family of nuclear proteins
known as “readers”. This knowledge has launched a wave
of activity around the rational design of proteins that interact with
histone PTMs. Useful molecular tools have emerged from this work,
enabling researchers to probe and manipulate chromatin states in live
cells. Chromatin-based proteins represent a vast design space that
remains underexplored. Therefore, we have developed a rapid prototyping
platform to identify engineered fusion proteins that bind histone
PTMs <i>in vitro</i> and regulate genes near the same histone
PTMs in living cells. We have used our system to build gene activators
with strong avidity for the gene silencing-associated histone PTM
H3K27me3. Here, we describe procedures and data for cell-free production
of fluorescently tagged fusion proteins, enzyme-linked immunosorbent
assay-based measurement of histone PTM binding, and a live cell assay
to demonstrate that the fusion proteins modulate transcriptional activation
at a site that carries the target histone PTM. This pipeline will
be useful for synthetic biologists who are interested in designing
novel histone PTM-binding actuators and probes
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A transient reporter for editing enrichment (TREE) in human cells
Current approaches to identify cell populations that have been modified with deaminase base editing technologies are inefficient and rely on downstream sequencing techniques. In this study, we utilized a blue fluorescent protein (BFP) that converts to green fluorescent protein (GFP) upon a C-to-T substitution as an assay to report directly on base editing activity within a cell. Using this assay, we optimize various base editing transfection parameters and delivery strategies. Moreover, we utilize this assay in conjunction with flow cytometry to develop a transient reporter for editing enrichment (TREE) to efficiently purify base-edited cell populations. Compared to conventional cell enrichment strategies that employ reporters of transfection (RoT), TREE significantly improved the editing efficiency at multiple independent loci, with efficiencies approaching 80%. We also employed the BFP-to-GFP conversion assay to optimize base editor vector design in human pluripotent stem cells (hPSCs), a cell type that is resistant to genome editing and in which modification via base editors has not been previously reported. At last, using these optimized vectors in the context of TREE allowed for the highly efficient editing of hPSCs. We envision TREE as a readily adoptable method to facilitate base editing applications in synthetic biology, disease modeling, and regenerative medicine.United States Department of Health & Human Services National Institutes of Health (NIH) - USA [R01GM121698, R21AG056706, R01GM106081, R01GM131405]; Arizona Biomedical Research Commission [ADHS16-162401]; International Foundation for Ethical Research Fellowship [R21AG056706]Open access journalThis item from the UA Faculty Publications collection is made available by the University of Arizona with support from the University of Arizona Libraries. If you have questions, please contact us at [email protected]
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BIG-TREE: Base-Edited Isogenic hPSC Line Generation Using a Transient Reporter for Editing Enrichment
Current CRISPR-targeted single-nucleotide modifications and subsequent isogenic cell line generation in human pluripotent stem cells (hPSCs) require the introduction of deleterious double-stranded DNA breaks followed by inefficient homology-directed repair (HDR). Here, we utilize Cas9 deaminase base-editing technologies to co-target genomic loci and an episomal reporter to enable single-nucleotide genomic changes in hPSCs without HDR. Together, this method entitled base-edited isogenic hPSC line generation using a transient reporter for editing enrichment (BIG-TREE) allows for single-nucleotide editing efficiencies of >80% across multiple hPSC lines. In addition, we show that BIG-TREE allows for efficient generation of loss-of-function hPSC lines via introduction of premature stop codons. Finally, we use BIG-TREE to achieve efficient multiplex editing of hPSCs at several independent loci. This easily adoptable method will allow for the precise and efficient base editing of hPSCs for use in developmental biology, disease modeling, drug screening, and cell-based therapies.Open access journalThis item from the UA Faculty Publications collection is made available by the University of Arizona with support from the University of Arizona Libraries. If you have questions, please contact us at [email protected]
Characterization of diverse homoserine lactone synthases in Escherichia coli.
Quorum sensing networks have been identified in over one hundred bacterial species to date. A subset of these networks regulate group behaviors, such as bioluminescence, virulence, and biofilm formation, by sending and receiving small molecules called homoserine lactones (HSLs). Bioengineers have incorporated quorum sensing pathways into genetic circuits to connect logical operations. However, the development of higher-order genetic circuitry is inhibited by crosstalk, in which one quorum sensing network responds to HSLs produced by a different network. Here, we report the construction and characterization of a library of ten synthases including some that are expected to produce HSLs that are incompatible with the Lux pathway, and therefore show no crosstalk. We demonstrated their function in a common lab chassis, Escherichia coli BL21, and in two contexts, liquid and solid agar cultures, using decoupled Sender and Receiver pathways. We observed weak or strong stimulation of a Lux receiver by longer-chain or shorter-chain HSL-generating Senders, respectively. We also considered the under-investigated risk of unintentional release of incompletely deactivated HSLs in biological waste. We found that HSL-enriched media treated with bleach were still bioactive, while autoclaving deactivates LuxR induction. This work represents the most extensive comparison of quorum signaling synthases to date and greatly expands the bacterial signaling toolkit while recommending practices for disposal based on empirical, quantitative evidence
Tandem Histone-Binding Domains Enhance the Activity of a Synthetic Chromatin Effector
Fusion proteins that
specifically interact with biochemical marks
on chromosomes represent a new class of synthetic transcriptional
regulators that decode cell state information rather than DNA sequences.
In multicellular organisms, information relevant to cell state, tissue
identity, and oncogenesis is often encoded as biochemical modifications
of histones, which are bound to DNA in eukaryotic nuclei and regulate
gene expression states. We have previously reported the development
and validation of the “polycomb-based transcription factor”
(PcTF), a fusion protein that recognizes histone modifications through
a protein–protein interaction between its polycomb chromodomain
(PCD) motif and trimethylated lysine 27 of histone H3 (H3K27me3) at
genomic sites. We demonstrated that PcTF activates genes at methyl-histone-enriched
loci in cancer-derived cell lines. However, PcTF induces modest activation
of a methyl-histone associated reporter compared to a DNA-binding
activator. Therefore, we modified PcTF to enhance its binding avidity.
Here, we demonstrate the activity of a modified regulator called Pc<sub>2</sub>TF, which has two tandem copies of the H3K27me3-binding PCD
at the N-terminus. Pc<sub>2</sub>TF has a smaller apparent dissociation
constant value <i>in vitro</i> and shows enhanced gene activation
in HEK293 cells compared to PcTF. These results provide compelling
evidence that the intrinsic histone-binding activity of the PCD motif
can be used to tune the activity of synthetic histone-binding transcriptional
regulators