Rational diversification of a promoter providing fine-tuned expression and orthogonal regulation for synthetic biology.

Yeast is an ideal organism for the development and application of synthetic biology, yet there remain relatively few well-characterised biological parts suitable for precise engineering of this chassis. In order to address this current need, we present here a strategy that takes a single biological...

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Main Authors: Benjamin A Blount, Tim Weenink, Serge Vasylechko, Tom Ellis
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2012-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC3307721?pdf=render
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spelling doaj-ebf1227600604f68b0614a941c03c1402020-11-25T01:17:58ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032012-01-0173e3327910.1371/journal.pone.0033279Rational diversification of a promoter providing fine-tuned expression and orthogonal regulation for synthetic biology.Benjamin A BlountTim WeeninkSerge VasylechkoTom EllisYeast is an ideal organism for the development and application of synthetic biology, yet there remain relatively few well-characterised biological parts suitable for precise engineering of this chassis. In order to address this current need, we present here a strategy that takes a single biological part, a promoter, and re-engineers it to produce a fine-graded output range promoter library and new regulated promoters desirable for orthogonal synthetic biology applications. A highly constitutive Saccharomyces cerevisiae promoter, PFY1p, was identified by bioinformatic approaches, characterised in vivo and diversified at its core sequence to create a 36-member promoter library. TetR regulation was introduced into PFY1p to create a synthetic inducible promoter (iPFY1p) that functions in an inverter device. Orthogonal and scalable regulation of synthetic promoters was then demonstrated for the first time using customisable Transcription Activator-Like Effectors (TALEs) modified and designed to act as orthogonal repressors for specific PFY1-based promoters. The ability to diversify a promoter at its core sequences and then independently target Transcription Activator-Like Orthogonal Repressors (TALORs) to virtually any of these sequences shows great promise toward the design and construction of future synthetic gene networks that encode complex "multi-wire" logic functions.http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC3307721?pdf=render
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Benjamin A Blount
Tim Weenink
Serge Vasylechko
Tom Ellis
spellingShingle Benjamin A Blount
Tim Weenink
Serge Vasylechko
Tom Ellis
Rational diversification of a promoter providing fine-tuned expression and orthogonal regulation for synthetic biology.
PLoS ONE
author_facet Benjamin A Blount
Tim Weenink
Serge Vasylechko
Tom Ellis
author_sort Benjamin A Blount
title Rational diversification of a promoter providing fine-tuned expression and orthogonal regulation for synthetic biology.
title_short Rational diversification of a promoter providing fine-tuned expression and orthogonal regulation for synthetic biology.
title_full Rational diversification of a promoter providing fine-tuned expression and orthogonal regulation for synthetic biology.
title_fullStr Rational diversification of a promoter providing fine-tuned expression and orthogonal regulation for synthetic biology.
title_full_unstemmed Rational diversification of a promoter providing fine-tuned expression and orthogonal regulation for synthetic biology.
title_sort rational diversification of a promoter providing fine-tuned expression and orthogonal regulation for synthetic biology.
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
series PLoS ONE
issn 1932-6203
publishDate 2012-01-01
description Yeast is an ideal organism for the development and application of synthetic biology, yet there remain relatively few well-characterised biological parts suitable for precise engineering of this chassis. In order to address this current need, we present here a strategy that takes a single biological part, a promoter, and re-engineers it to produce a fine-graded output range promoter library and new regulated promoters desirable for orthogonal synthetic biology applications. A highly constitutive Saccharomyces cerevisiae promoter, PFY1p, was identified by bioinformatic approaches, characterised in vivo and diversified at its core sequence to create a 36-member promoter library. TetR regulation was introduced into PFY1p to create a synthetic inducible promoter (iPFY1p) that functions in an inverter device. Orthogonal and scalable regulation of synthetic promoters was then demonstrated for the first time using customisable Transcription Activator-Like Effectors (TALEs) modified and designed to act as orthogonal repressors for specific PFY1-based promoters. The ability to diversify a promoter at its core sequences and then independently target Transcription Activator-Like Orthogonal Repressors (TALORs) to virtually any of these sequences shows great promise toward the design and construction of future synthetic gene networks that encode complex "multi-wire" logic functions.
url http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC3307721?pdf=render
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