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1.
Elife ; 112022 03 21.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35312478

ABSTRACT

Division of labor between cells is ubiquitous in biology but the use of multicellular consortia for engineering applications is only beginning to be explored. A significant advantage of multicellular circuits is their potential to be modular with respect to composition but this claim has not yet been extensively tested using experiments and quantitative modeling. Here, we construct a library of 24 yeast strains capable of sending, receiving or responding to three molecular signals, characterize them experimentally and build quantitative models of their input-output relationships. We then compose these strains into two- and three-strain cascades as well as a four-strain bistable switch and show that experimentally measured consortia dynamics can be predicted from the models of the constituent parts. To further explore the achievable range of behaviors, we perform a fully automated computational search over all two-, three-, and four-strain consortia to identify combinations that realize target behaviors including logic gates, band-pass filters, and time pulses. Strain combinations that are predicted to map onto a target behavior are further computationally optimized and then experimentally tested. Experiments closely track computational predictions. The high reliability of these model descriptions further strengthens the feasibility and highlights the potential for distributed computing in synthetic biology.


Subject(s)
Saccharomyces cerevisiae , Synthetic Biology , Gene Library , Logic , Reproducibility of Results , Saccharomyces cerevisiae/genetics , Synthetic Biology/methods
2.
Cell Syst ; 12(7): 716-732.e7, 2021 07 21.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34051140

ABSTRACT

Gene fragments derived from structural domains mediating physical interactions can modulate biological functions. Utilizing this, we developed lentiviral overexpression libraries of peptides comprehensively tiling high-confidence cancer driver genes. Toward inhibiting cancer growth, we assayed ~66,000 peptides, tiling 65 cancer drivers and 579 mutant alleles. Pooled fitness screens in two breast cancer cell lines revealed peptides, which selectively reduced cellular proliferation, implicating oncogenic protein domains important for cell fitness. Coupling of cell-penetrating motifs to these peptides enabled drug-like function, with peptides derived from EGFR and RAF1 inhibiting cell growth at IC50s of 27-63 µM. We anticipate that this peptide-tiling (PepTile) approach will enable rapid de novo mapping of bioactive protein domains and associated interfering peptides.


Subject(s)
Neoplasms , Cell Proliferation , Humans , Neoplasms/drug therapy , Neoplasms/genetics , Oncogenes , Peptides/chemistry , Peptides/pharmacology , Protein Domains
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