A plasmid-based Escherichia coli gene expression system with cell-to-cell variation below the extrinsic noise limit.

Experiments in synthetic biology and microbiology can benefit from protein expression systems with low cell-to-cell variability (noise) and expression levels precisely tunable across a useful dynamic range. Despite advances in understanding the molecular biology of microbial gene regulation, many ex...

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Main Author: Zach Hensel
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2017-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC5662224?pdf=render
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spelling doaj-6f608090ab6c4b3b8a0d45c35f94276d2020-11-24T21:49:45ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032017-01-011210e018725910.1371/journal.pone.0187259A plasmid-based Escherichia coli gene expression system with cell-to-cell variation below the extrinsic noise limit.Zach HenselExperiments in synthetic biology and microbiology can benefit from protein expression systems with low cell-to-cell variability (noise) and expression levels precisely tunable across a useful dynamic range. Despite advances in understanding the molecular biology of microbial gene regulation, many experiments employ protein-expression systems exhibiting high noise and nearly all-or-none responses to induction. I present an expression system that incorporates elements known to reduce gene expression noise: negative autoregulation and bicistronic transcription. I show by stochastic simulation that while negative autoregulation can produce a more gradual response to induction, bicistronic expression of a repressor and gene of interest can be necessary to reduce noise below the extrinsic limit. I synthesized a plasmid-based system incorporating these principles and studied its properties in Escherichia coli cells, using flow cytometry and fluorescence microscopy to characterize induction dose-response, induction/repression kinetics and gene expression noise. By varying ribosome binding site strengths, expression levels from 55-10,740 molecules/cell were achieved with noise below the extrinsic limit. Individual strains are inducible across a dynamic range greater than 20-fold. Experimental comparison of different regulatory networks confirmed that bicistronic autoregulation reduces noise, and revealed unexpectedly high noise for a conventional expression system with a constitutively expressed transcriptional repressor. I suggest a hybrid, low-noise expression system to increase the dynamic range.http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC5662224?pdf=render
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Zach Hensel
spellingShingle Zach Hensel
A plasmid-based Escherichia coli gene expression system with cell-to-cell variation below the extrinsic noise limit.
PLoS ONE
author_facet Zach Hensel
author_sort Zach Hensel
title A plasmid-based Escherichia coli gene expression system with cell-to-cell variation below the extrinsic noise limit.
title_short A plasmid-based Escherichia coli gene expression system with cell-to-cell variation below the extrinsic noise limit.
title_full A plasmid-based Escherichia coli gene expression system with cell-to-cell variation below the extrinsic noise limit.
title_fullStr A plasmid-based Escherichia coli gene expression system with cell-to-cell variation below the extrinsic noise limit.
title_full_unstemmed A plasmid-based Escherichia coli gene expression system with cell-to-cell variation below the extrinsic noise limit.
title_sort plasmid-based escherichia coli gene expression system with cell-to-cell variation below the extrinsic noise limit.
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
series PLoS ONE
issn 1932-6203
publishDate 2017-01-01
description Experiments in synthetic biology and microbiology can benefit from protein expression systems with low cell-to-cell variability (noise) and expression levels precisely tunable across a useful dynamic range. Despite advances in understanding the molecular biology of microbial gene regulation, many experiments employ protein-expression systems exhibiting high noise and nearly all-or-none responses to induction. I present an expression system that incorporates elements known to reduce gene expression noise: negative autoregulation and bicistronic transcription. I show by stochastic simulation that while negative autoregulation can produce a more gradual response to induction, bicistronic expression of a repressor and gene of interest can be necessary to reduce noise below the extrinsic limit. I synthesized a plasmid-based system incorporating these principles and studied its properties in Escherichia coli cells, using flow cytometry and fluorescence microscopy to characterize induction dose-response, induction/repression kinetics and gene expression noise. By varying ribosome binding site strengths, expression levels from 55-10,740 molecules/cell were achieved with noise below the extrinsic limit. Individual strains are inducible across a dynamic range greater than 20-fold. Experimental comparison of different regulatory networks confirmed that bicistronic autoregulation reduces noise, and revealed unexpectedly high noise for a conventional expression system with a constitutively expressed transcriptional repressor. I suggest a hybrid, low-noise expression system to increase the dynamic range.
url http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC5662224?pdf=render
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