Red-Light-Induced Genetic System for Control of Extracellular Electron Transfer.
Fengjie ZhaoChristina M NimanGhazaleh OstovarMarko S ChavezJoshua T AtkinsonBenjamin M BonisJeffrey A GralnickMohamed Y El-NaggarJames Q BoedickerPublished in: ACS synthetic biology (2024)
Optogenetics is a powerful tool for spatiotemporal control of gene expression. Several light-inducible gene regulators have been developed to function in bacteria, and these regulatory circuits have been ported to new host strains. Here, we developed and adapted a red-light-inducible transcription factor for Shewanella oneidensis . This regulatory circuit is based on the iLight optogenetic system, which controls gene expression using red light. A thermodynamic model and promoter engineering were used to adapt this system to achieve differential gene expression in light and dark conditions within a S. oneidensis host strain. We further improved the iLight optogenetic system by adding a repressor to invert the genetic circuit and activate gene expression under red light illumination. The inverted iLight genetic circuit was used to control extracellular electron transfer within S. oneidensis . The ability to use both red- and blue-light-induced optogenetic circuits simultaneously was also demonstrated. Our work expands the synthetic biology capabilities in S. oneidensis , which could facilitate future advances in applications with electrogenic bacteria.