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1.
Nucleic Acids Res ; 42(14): 9493-503, 2014 Aug.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25034694

ABSTRACT

Co-localization of biochemical processes plays a key role in the directional control of metabolic fluxes toward specific products in cells. Here, we employ in vivo scaffolds made of RNA that can bind engineered proteins fused to specific RNA binding domains. This allows proteins to be co-localized on RNA scaffolds inside living Escherichia coli. We assembled a library of eight aptamers and corresponding RNA binding domains fused to partial fragments of fluorescent proteins. New scaffold designs could co-localize split green fluorescent protein fragments to produce activity as measured by cell-based fluorescence. The scaffolds consisted of either single bivalent RNAs or RNAs designed to polymerize in one or two dimensions. The new scaffolds were used to increase metabolic output from a two-enzyme pentadecane production pathway that contains a fatty aldehyde intermediate, as well as three and four enzymes in the succinate production pathway. Pentadecane synthesis depended on the geometry of enzymes on the scaffold, as determined through systematic reorientation of the acyl-ACP reductase fusion by rotation via addition of base pairs to its cognate RNA aptamer. Together, these data suggest that intra-cellular scaffolding of enzymatic reactions may enhance the direct channeling of a variety of substrates.


Subject(s)
Enzymes/genetics , Enzymes/metabolism , Metabolic Engineering/methods , Metabolic Networks and Pathways , RNA/metabolism , Alkanes/metabolism , Aptamers, Nucleotide/chemistry , Aptamers, Nucleotide/metabolism , Escherichia coli/genetics , Escherichia coli/metabolism , Fluorescent Dyes , Green Fluorescent Proteins/genetics , Metabolic Networks and Pathways/genetics , Protein Structure, Tertiary , RNA/chemistry , RNA-Binding Proteins/chemistry , Recombinant Fusion Proteins/chemistry , Recombinant Fusion Proteins/metabolism , Succinic Acid/metabolism
2.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A ; 108(10): 3941-6, 2011 Mar 08.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-21368150

ABSTRACT

Hydrogenases catalyze the reversible reaction 2H(+) + 2e(-) ↔ H(2) with an equilibrium constant that is dependent on the reducing potential of electrons carried by their redox partner. To examine the possibility of increasing the photobiological production of hydrogen within cyanobacterial cultures, we expressed the [FeFe] hydrogenase, HydA, from Clostridium acetobutylicum in the non-nitrogen-fixing cyanobacterium Synechococcus elongatus sp. 7942. We demonstrate that the heterologously expressed hydrogenase is functional in vitro and in vivo, and that the in vivo hydrogenase activity is connected to the light-dependent reactions of the electron transport chain. Under anoxic conditions, HydA activity is capable of supporting light-dependent hydrogen evolution at a rate > 500-fold greater than that supported by the endogenous [NiFe] hydrogenase. Furthermore, HydA can support limited growth solely using H(2) and light as the source of reducing equivalents under conditions where Photosystem II is inactivated. Finally, we demonstrate that the addition of exogenous ferredoxins can modulate redox flux in the hydrogenase-expressing strain, allowing for greater hydrogen yields and for dark fermentation of internal energy stores into hydrogen gas.


Subject(s)
Hydrogenase/metabolism , Iron-Sulfur Proteins/metabolism , Synechococcus/enzymology , Electron Transport , Hydrogen/metabolism , Oxidation-Reduction , Synechococcus/growth & development
3.
Biol Cybern ; 102(2): 109-21, 2010 Feb.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-20012545

ABSTRACT

In an earlier study, we suggested that adaptive gap junctions (GJs) might be a basis of cardiac memory, a phenomenon which refers to persistent electrophysiological response of the heart to external pacing. Later, it was also shown that the proposed mechanism of adaptation of GJs is consistent with known electrophysiology of GJs. In the present article, we show that a pair of cardiac cell models coupled by dynamic, voltage-sensitive GJs exhibits bistable behavior under certain conditions. Three kinds of cell pairs are considered: (1) a Noble-Noble cell pair that represents adjacent cells in Purkinje network, (2) a pair of DiFranceso-Noble cells that represents adjacent SA nodal cells, and (3) a model of Noble cell coupled to Luo-Rudy cell model, which represents an interacting pair of a Purkinje fiber and a ventricular myocyte. Bistability is demonstrated in all the three cases. We suggest that this bistability might be an underlying factor behind cardiac memory. Focused analysis of a pair of Noble cell models showed that bistability is obtained only when the properties of GJs "match" with the properties of the pair of cells that is coupled by the GJs. This novel notion of match between GJs and cardiac cell types might give an insight into specialized distributions of various connexin proteins in cardiac tissue.


Subject(s)
Adaptation, Physiological/physiology , Gap Junctions/physiology , Heart Conduction System/physiology , Heart/physiology , Models, Neurological , Myocardium/cytology , Cell Communication/physiology , Heart Conduction System/cytology , Humans , Muscle Cells/cytology , Muscle Cells/physiology
4.
Math Biosci ; 212(2): 132-48, 2008 Apr.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-18316101

ABSTRACT

Memory in the nervous system is essentially a network effect, resulting from activity-dependent synaptic modification in a network of neurons. Like the nervous system, the heart is a network of cardiac cells electrically coupled by gap junctions. The heart too has memory, termed cardiac memory, whereby the effect of an external electrical activation persists long after the presentation of stimulus is terminated. We have earlier proposed that adaptation of gap junctions, as a function of membrane voltages of the cells that are coupled by the gap junctions, is related to cardiac memory [V.S. Chakravarthy, J. Ghosh, On Hebbian-like adaption in heart muscle: a proposal for "Cardiac Memory", Biol. Cybern. 76 (1997) 207, J. Krishnan, V.S. Chakravarthy, S. Radhakrishnan, On the role of gap junctions on cardiac memory effect, Comput. Cardiol. 32 (2005) 13]. Using the proposed mechanism, we demonstrate memory effect using computational models of interacting cell pairs. In this paper, we address the biological validity of the proposed mechanism of gap junctional adaptation. It is known from electrophysiology of gap junctions that the conductance of these channels adapts as a function of junctional voltage. At a first sight, this form of voltage dependence seems to be at variance with the form required by our mechanism. But we show, with the help of a theoretical model, that the proposed mechanism of voltage-dependent adaptation of gap junctions, is compatible with the known voltage-sensitivity of gap junctions observed in electrophysiological studies. Our analysis suggests a new significance of the voltage-sensitivity of gap junctions and its possible link to the phenomenon of cardiac memory.


Subject(s)
Cardiac Electrophysiology , Gap Junctions/physiology , Heart/physiology , Models, Cardiovascular , Computer Simulation , Humans , Membrane Potentials/physiology
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