Login / Signup

A Strategy for Creating Organisms Dependent on Noncanonical Amino Acids.

Weimin XuanPeter G Schultz
Published in: Angewandte Chemie (International ed. in English) (2017)
The use of noncanonical amino acids (ncAAs) to control the viability of an organism provides a strategy for the development of conditional "kill switches" for live vaccines or engineered human cells. We report an approach inspired by the posttranslational acetylation/deacetylation of lysine residues, in which a protein encoded by a gene with an in-frame nonsense codon at an essential lysine can be expressed in its native state only upon genetic incorporation of N-ϵ-acetyl-l-Lys (AcK), and subsequent enzymatic deacetylation in the host cell. We applied this strategy to two essential E. coli enzymes: the branched-chain aminotransferase BCAT and the DNA replication initiator protein DnaA. We also devised a barnase-based conditional suicide switch to further lower the escape frequency of the host cells. This strategy offers a number of attractive features for controlling host viability, including a single small-molecule-based kill switch, low escape frequency, and unaffected protein function.
Keyphrases
  • amino acid
  • small molecule
  • protein protein
  • induced apoptosis
  • genome wide
  • escherichia coli
  • copy number
  • binding protein
  • single cell
  • hydrogen peroxide
  • oxidative stress
  • nitric oxide
  • signaling pathway
  • dna methylation