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1.
Nat Chem Biol ; 17(6): 724-731, 2021 06.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33820990

ABSTRACT

Genetically modified microorganisms (GMMs) can enable a wide range of important applications including environmental sensing and responsive engineered living materials. However, containment of GMMs to prevent environmental escape and satisfy regulatory requirements is a bottleneck for real-world use. While current biochemical strategies restrict unwanted growth of GMMs in the environment, there is a need for deployable physical containment technologies to achieve redundant, multi-layered and robust containment. We developed a hydrogel-based encapsulation system that incorporates a biocompatible multilayer tough shell and an alginate-based core. This deployable physical containment strategy (DEPCOS) allows no detectable GMM escape, bacteria to be protected against environmental insults including antibiotics and low pH, controllable lifespan and easy retrieval of genomically recoded bacteria. To highlight the versatility of DEPCOS, we demonstrated that robustly encapsulated cells can execute useful functions, including performing cell-cell communication with other encapsulated bacteria and sensing heavy metals in water samples from the Charles River.


Subject(s)
Bacteria/drug effects , Hydrogels/pharmacology , Alginates/chemistry , Anti-Bacterial Agents/pharmacology , Bacteria/genetics , Biocompatible Materials , Bioengineering , DNA, Bacterial/chemistry , DNA, Bacterial/genetics , Environmental Monitoring , Escherichia coli/drug effects , Escherichia coli/genetics , Heme/chemistry , Metals, Heavy/chemistry , Organisms, Genetically Modified , Quorum Sensing , Rivers , Water Pollutants/chemistry
2.
Nat Biotechnol ; 33(12): 1272-1279, 2015 Dec.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26571098

ABSTRACT

Expansion of the genetic code with nonstandard amino acids (nsAAs) has enabled biosynthesis of proteins with diverse new chemistries. However, this technology has been largely restricted to proteins containing a single or few nsAA instances. Here we describe an in vivo evolution approach in a genomically recoded Escherichia coli strain for the selection of orthogonal translation systems capable of multi-site nsAA incorporation. We evolved chromosomal aminoacyl-tRNA synthetases (aaRSs) with up to 25-fold increased protein production for p-acetyl-L-phenylalanine and p-azido-L-phenylalanine (pAzF). We also evolved aaRSs with tunable specificities for 14 nsAAs, including an enzyme that efficiently charges pAzF while excluding 237 other nsAAs. These variants enabled production of elastin-like-polypeptides with 30 nsAA residues at high yields (∼50 mg/L) and high accuracy of incorporation (>95%). This approach to aaRS evolution should accelerate and expand our ability to produce functionalized proteins and sequence-defined polymers with diverse chemistries.

4.
Nucleic Acids Res ; 43(3): 1945-54, 2015 Feb 18.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25567985

ABSTRACT

Genetically modified organisms (GMOs) are commonly used to produce valuable compounds in closed industrial systems. However, their emerging applications in open clinical or environmental settings require enhanced safety and security measures. Intrinsic biocontainment, the creation of bacterial hosts unable to survive in natural environments, remains a major unsolved biosafety problem. We developed a new biocontainment strategy containing overlapping 'safeguards'-engineered riboregulators that tightly control expression of essential genes, and an engineered addiction module based on nucleases that cleaves the host genome-to restrict viability of Escherichia coli cells to media containing exogenously supplied synthetic small molecules. These multilayered safeguards maintain robust growth in permissive conditions, eliminate persistence and limit escape frequencies to <1.3 × 10(-12). The staged approach to safeguard implementation revealed mechanisms of escape and enabled strategies to overcome them. Our safeguarding strategy is modular and employs conserved mechanisms that could be extended to clinically or industrially relevant organisms and undomesticated species.


Subject(s)
Escherichia coli/genetics , Organisms, Genetically Modified/growth & development , Cloning, Molecular , Coculture Techniques , Culture Media , Escherichia coli/growth & development , Recombination, Genetic
5.
Nature ; 518(7537): 89-93, 2015 Feb 05.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25607356

ABSTRACT

Genetically modified organisms (GMOs) are increasingly used in research and industrial systems to produce high-value pharmaceuticals, fuels and chemicals. Genetic isolation and intrinsic biocontainment would provide essential biosafety measures to secure these closed systems and enable safe applications of GMOs in open systems, which include bioremediation and probiotics. Although safeguards have been designed to control cell growth by essential gene regulation, inducible toxin switches and engineered auxotrophies, these approaches are compromised by cross-feeding of essential metabolites, leaked expression of essential genes, or genetic mutations. Here we describe the construction of a series of genomically recoded organisms (GROs) whose growth is restricted by the expression of multiple essential genes that depend on exogenously supplied synthetic amino acids (sAAs). We introduced a Methanocaldococcus jannaschii tRNA:aminoacyl-tRNA synthetase pair into the chromosome of a GRO derived from Escherichia coli that lacks all TAG codons and release factor 1, endowing this organism with the orthogonal translational components to convert TAG into a dedicated sense codon for sAAs. Using multiplex automated genome engineering, we introduced in-frame TAG codons into 22 essential genes, linking their expression to the incorporation of synthetic phenylalanine-derived amino acids. Of the 60 sAA-dependent variants isolated, a notable strain harbouring three TAG codons in conserved functional residues of MurG, DnaA and SerS and containing targeted tRNA deletions maintained robust growth and exhibited undetectable escape frequencies upon culturing ∼10(11) cells on solid media for 7 days or in liquid media for 20 days. This is a significant improvement over existing biocontainment approaches. We constructed synthetic auxotrophs dependent on sAAs that were not rescued by cross-feeding in environmental growth assays. These auxotrophic GROs possess alternative genetic codes that impart genetic isolation by impeding horizontal gene transfer and now depend on the use of synthetic biochemical building blocks, advancing orthogonal barriers between engineered organisms and the environment.


Subject(s)
Amino Acids/chemical synthesis , Amino Acids/pharmacology , Containment of Biohazards/methods , Escherichia coli/drug effects , Escherichia coli/genetics , Microbial Viability/drug effects , Synthetic Biology/methods , Amino Acids/chemistry , Amino Acids/metabolism , Amino Acyl-tRNA Synthetases/genetics , Amino Acyl-tRNA Synthetases/metabolism , Catalytic Domain/genetics , Codon/genetics , Culture Media/chemistry , Culture Media/pharmacology , Environment , Escherichia coli/cytology , Escherichia coli/metabolism , Escherichia coli Proteins/biosynthesis , Escherichia coli Proteins/chemistry , Escherichia coli Proteins/genetics , Escherichia coli Proteins/metabolism , Evolution, Molecular , Gene Transfer, Horizontal/genetics , Genes, Essential/genetics , Genetic Code/genetics , Genetic Engineering/methods , Genome, Bacterial/genetics , Microbial Viability/genetics , Molecular Sequence Data , Organisms, Genetically Modified/genetics , Organisms, Genetically Modified/growth & development , Organisms, Genetically Modified/metabolism , Peptide Termination Factors/genetics , Phenylalanine/chemistry , Phenylalanine/metabolism , Protein Multimerization/genetics , RNA, Transfer/genetics
6.
Science ; 342(6156): 357-60, 2013 Oct 18.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-24136966

ABSTRACT

We describe the construction and characterization of a genomically recoded organism (GRO). We replaced all known UAG stop codons in Escherichia coli MG1655 with synonymous UAA codons, which permitted the deletion of release factor 1 and reassignment of UAG translation function. This GRO exhibited improved properties for incorporation of nonstandard amino acids that expand the chemical diversity of proteins in vivo. The GRO also exhibited increased resistance to T7 bacteriophage, demonstrating that new genetic codes could enable increased viral resistance.


Subject(s)
Amino Acids/genetics , Bacteriophage T7/physiology , Codon, Terminator/genetics , Escherichia coli/genetics , Escherichia coli/virology , Organisms, Genetically Modified/genetics , Organisms, Genetically Modified/virology , Amino Acid Substitution/genetics , Escherichia coli Proteins/genetics , Genetic Engineering , Genome, Bacterial , Peptide Chain Termination, Translational/genetics , Peptide Termination Factors/genetics
7.
FEBS Lett ; 586(20): 3716-22, 2012 Oct 19.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-22982858

ABSTRACT

Genetically encoded phosphoserine incorporation programmed by the UAG codon was achieved by addition of engineered elongation factor and an archaeal aminoacyl-tRNA synthetase to the normal Escherichia coli translation machinery (Park et al., 2011) Science 333, 1151). However, protein yield suffers from expression of the orthogonal phosphoserine translation system and competition with release factor 1 (RF-1). In a strain lacking RF-1, phosphoserine phosphatase, and where seven UAG codons residing in essential genes were converted to UAA, phosphoserine incorporation into GFP and WNK4 was significantly elevated, but with an accompanying loss in cellular fitness and viability.


Subject(s)
Codon, Terminator/genetics , Escherichia coli Proteins/genetics , Escherichia coli/genetics , Gene Deletion , Peptide Termination Factors/deficiency , Peptide Termination Factors/genetics , Phosphoserine/metabolism , Protein Biosynthesis/genetics , Amino Acid Sequence , Base Sequence , Escherichia coli/cytology , Escherichia coli/growth & development , Escherichia coli/metabolism , Genome, Bacterial/genetics , Molecular Sequence Data , Phenotype , Proteome/genetics
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