Engineering intelligent chassis cells via recombinase-based MEMORY circuits.
Brian D HuangDowan KimYongjoon YuCorey J WilsonPublished in: Nature communications (2024)
Synthetic biologists seek to engineer intelligent living systems capable of decision-making, communication, and memory. Separate technologies exist for each tenet of intelligence; however, the unification of all three properties in a living system has not been achieved. Here, we engineer completely intelligent Escherichia coli strains that harbor six orthogonal and inducible genome-integrated recombinases, forming Molecularly Encoded Memory via an Orthogonal Recombinase arraY (MEMORY). MEMORY chassis cells facilitate intelligence via the discrete multi-input regulation of recombinase functions enabling inheritable DNA inversions, deletions, and genomic insertions. MEMORY cells can achieve programmable and permanent gain (or loss) of functions extrachromosomally or from a specific genomic locus, without the loss or modification of the MEMORY platform - enabling the sequential programming and reprogramming of DNA circuits within the cell. We demonstrate all three tenets of intelligence via a probiotic (Nissle 1917) MEMORY strain capable of information exchange with the gastrointestinal commensal Bacteroides thetaiotaomicron.
Keyphrases
- working memory
- escherichia coli
- induced apoptosis
- cell cycle arrest
- decision making
- healthcare
- high resolution
- high throughput
- single cell
- pseudomonas aeruginosa
- staphylococcus aureus
- stem cells
- gene expression
- cell proliferation
- endoplasmic reticulum stress
- cystic fibrosis
- genome wide
- cell free
- bone marrow
- dna methylation
- pi k akt
- high density