General Applicability of Synthetic Gene-Overexpression
for Cell-Type Ratio Control via Reprogramming
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Abstract
Control
of the cell-type ratio in multistable systems requires
wide-range control of the initial states of cells. Here, using a synthetic
circuit in <i>E. coli</i>, we describe the use of a simple
gene-overexpression system combined with a bistable toggle switch,
for the purposes of enabling the wide-range control of cellular states
and thus generating arbitrary cell-type ratios. Theoretically, overexpression
induction temporarily alters the bistable system to a monostable system,
in which the location of the single steady state of cells can be manipulated
over a wide range by regulating the overexpression levels. This induced
cellular state becomes the initial state of the basal bistable system
upon overexpression cessation, which restores the original bistable
system. We experimentally demonstrated that the overexpression induced
a monomodal cell distribution, and subsequent overexpression withdrawal
generated a bimodal distribution. Furthermore, as designed theoretically,
regulating the overexpression levels by adjusting the concentrations
of small molecules generated arbitrary cell-type ratios