Visualization of Evolutionary Stability Dynamics and
Competitive Fitness of Escherichia coli Engineered with Randomized Multigene Circuits
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Abstract
Strain engineering for synthetic
biology and metabolic engineering
applications often requires the expression of foreign proteins that
can reduce cellular fitness. In order to quantify and visualize the
evolutionary stability dynamics in engineered populations of Escherichia coli, we constructed randomized CMY (cyan-magenta-yellow)
genetic circuits with independently randomized promoters, ribosome
binding sites, and transcriptional terminators that express cyan fluorescent
protein (CFP), red fluorescent protein (RFP), and yellow fluorescent
protein (YFP). Using a CMY color system allows for a spectrum of different
colors to be produced under UV light since the relative ratio of fluorescent
proteins vary between circuits, and this system can be used for the
visualization of evolutionary stability dynamics. Evolutionary stability
results from 192 evolved populations (24 CMY circuits with 8 replicates
each) indicate that both the number of repeated sequences and overall
expression levels contribute to circuit stability. The most evolutionarily
robust circuit has no repeated parts, lower expression levels, and
is about 3-fold more stable relative to a rationally designed circuit.
Visualization results show that evolutionary dynamics are highly stochastic
between replicate evolved populations and color changes over evolutionary
time are consistent with quantitative data. We also measured the competitive
fitness of different mutants in an evolved population and find that
fitness is highest in mutants that express a lower number of genes
(0 and 1 > 2 > 3). In addition, we find that individual circuits
with
expression levels below 10% of the maximum have significantly higher
evolutionary stability, suggesting there may be a hypothetical “fitness
threshold” that can be used for robust circuit design