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1.
Nat Commun ; 13(1): 912, 2022 02 17.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35177637

ABSTRACT

To program intercellular communication for biomedicine, it is crucial to regulate the secretion and surface display of signaling proteins. If such regulations are at the protein level, there are additional advantages, including compact delivery and direct interactions with endogenous signaling pathways. Here we create a modular, generalizable design called Retained Endoplasmic Cleavable Secretion (RELEASE), with engineered proteins retained in the endoplasmic reticulum and displayed/secreted in response to specific proteases. The design allows functional regulation of multiple synthetic and natural proteins by synthetic protease circuits to realize diverse signal processing capabilities, including logic operation and threshold tuning. By linking RELEASE to additional sensing and processing circuits, we can achieve elevated protein secretion in response to "undruggable" oncogene KRAS mutants. RELEASE should enable the local, programmable delivery of intercellular cues for a broad variety of fields such as neurobiology, cancer immunotherapy and cell transplantation.


Subject(s)
Peptide Hydrolases/metabolism , Protein Transport , Synthetic Biology/methods , Flow Cytometry , HEK293 Cells , Humans , Mutation , Peptide Hydrolases/genetics , Protein Engineering/methods , Proto-Oncogene Proteins p21(ras)/genetics , Proto-Oncogene Proteins p21(ras)/metabolism , Signal Transduction/genetics
2.
Nat Commun ; 11(1): 4440, 2020 09 07.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32895374

ABSTRACT

Traditionally engineered genetic circuits have almost exclusively used naturally occurring transcriptional repressors. Recently, non-natural transcription factors (repressors) have been engineered and employed in synthetic biology with great success. However, transcriptional anti-repressors have largely been absent with regard to the regulation of genes in engineered genetic circuits. Here, we present a workflow for engineering systems of non-natural anti-repressors. In this study, we create 41 inducible anti-repressors. This collection of transcription factors respond to two distinct ligands, fructose (anti-FruR) or D-ribose (anti-RbsR); and were complemented by 14 additional engineered anti-repressors that respond to the ligand isopropyl ß-d-1-thiogalactopyranoside (anti-LacI). In turn, we use this collection of anti-repressors and complementary genetic architectures to confer logical control over gene expression. Here, we achieved all NOT oriented logical controls (i.e., NOT, NOR, NAND, and XNOR). The engineered transcription factors and corresponding series, parallel, and series-parallel genetic architectures represent a nascent anti-repressor based transcriptional programming structure.


Subject(s)
Bioengineering/methods , Lac Repressors/antagonists & inhibitors , Escherichia coli Proteins/metabolism , Gene Expression/physiology , Gene Regulatory Networks , Lac Repressors/chemical synthesis , Ligands , Repressor Proteins/antagonists & inhibitors , Repressor Proteins/chemical synthesis , Synthetic Biology/methods , Transcription Factors/chemical synthesis , Transcription Factors/metabolism
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