Identifying LasR Quorum Sensors with Improved Signal Specificity by Mapping the Sequence-Function Landscape.
Min ZengBiprodev SarkerStephen N RondthalerVanessa VuLauren B AndrewsPublished in: ACS synthetic biology (2024)
Programmable intercellular signaling using components of naturally occurring quorum sensing can allow for coordinated functions to be engineered in microbial consortia. LuxR-type transcriptional regulators are widely used for this purpose and are activated by homoserine lactone (HSL) signals. However, they often suffer from imperfect molecular discrimination of structurally similar HSLs, causing misregulation within engineered consortia containing multiple HSL signals. Here, we studied one such example, the regulator LasR from Pseudomonas aeruginosa . We elucidated its sequence-function relationship for ligand specificity using targeted protein engineering and multiplexed high-throughput biosensor screening. A pooled combinatorial saturation mutagenesis library (9,486 LasR DNA sequences) was created by mutating six residues in LasR's β5 sheet with single, double, or triple amino acid substitutions. Sort-seq assays were performed in parallel using cognate and noncognate HSLs to quantify each corresponding sensor's response to each HSL signal, which identified hundreds of highly specific variants. Sensor variants identified were individually assayed and exhibited up to 60.6-fold ( p = 0.0013) improved relative activation by the cognate signal compared to the wildtype. Interestingly, we uncovered prevalent mutational epistasis and previously unidentified residues contributing to signal specificity. The resulting sensors with negligible signal crosstalk could be broadly applied to engineer bacteria consortia.
Keyphrases
- amino acid
- high throughput
- single cell
- pseudomonas aeruginosa
- transcription factor
- heat shock
- randomized controlled trial
- clinical trial
- cystic fibrosis
- microbial community
- rna seq
- biofilm formation
- dna methylation
- quantum dots
- structural basis
- escherichia coli
- low cost
- cancer therapy
- sensitive detection
- cell free
- multidrug resistant