Login / Signup

Mitigating Host Burden of Genetic Circuits by Engineering Autonegatively Regulated Parts and Improving Functional Prediction.

Ying GuanXinmao ChenBin ShaoXiangyu JiYanhui XiangGuoqiang JiangLina XuZhanglin LinQi OuyangChunbo Lou
Published in: ACS synthetic biology (2022)
Mitigating unintended interferences between circuits and host cells is key to realize applications of synthetic regulatory systems both for bacteria and mammalian cells. Here, we demonstrated that growth burden and circuit dysregulation occurred in a concentration-dependent manner for specific transcription factors (CymR*/CymR) in E.coli , and direct negative feedback modules were able to control the concentration of CymR*/CymR, mitigate growth burden, and restore circuit functions. A quantitative design scheme was developed for circuits embedded with autorepression modules. Four key parameters were theoretically identified to determine the performance of autoregulated switches and were experimentally modified by fine-tuning promoter architectures and cooperativity. Using this strategy, we synthesized a number of switches and demonstrated its improvement of product titers and host growth controlling the complex deoxyviolacein biosynthesis pathway. Furthermore, we restored functions of a dysregulated multilayer NOR gate by integrating autorepression modules. Our work provides a blueprint for engineering host-adaptable synthetic systems.
Keyphrases
  • transcription factor
  • gene expression
  • dna methylation
  • escherichia coli
  • network analysis
  • cell cycle arrest
  • high resolution
  • mass spectrometry
  • cell death
  • cell proliferation