Engineering Biosensors
with Extended, Narrowed, or
Arbitrarily Edited Dynamic Range
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Abstract
Biomolecular recognition has long been an important theme
in artificial
sensing technologies. A current limitation of protein- and nucleic
acid-based recognition, however, is that the useful dynamic range
of single-site binding typically spans an 81-fold change in target
concentration, an effect that limits the utility of biosensors in
applications calling for either great sensitivity (a steeper relationship
between target concentration and output signal) or the quantification
of more wide-ranging concentrations. In response, we have adapted
strategies employed by nature to modulate the input–output
response of its biorecognition systems to rationally edit the useful
dynamic range of an artificial biosensor. By engineering a structure-switching
mechanism to tune the affinity of a receptor molecule, we first generated
a set of receptor variants displaying similar specificities but different
target affinities. Using combinations of these receptor variants (signaling
and nonsignaling), we then rationally extended (to 900000-fold), narrowed
(to 5-fold), and edited (three-state) the normally 81-fold dynamic
range of a representative biosensor. We believe that these strategies
may be widely applicable to technologies reliant on biorecognition