Qr: host:"E. coli"
Showing 1 - 25 of 146 results
1.
Coiled-coil register transitions and coupling with the effector's inhibitory site enables high fold changes in blue light-regulated diguanylate cyclases.
Abstract:
Cellular signaling cascades rely on transfer of information from one protein to another or within a single protein. To facilitate signal integration, specific structural motifs evolved that allow signal processing and also enable modular downstream response integration, facilitating sophisticated regulatory mechanisms. On a structural level, especially coiled-coil helices are frequently observed as signaling motifs. In diguanylate cyclases (DGCs) featuring GGDEF domains, N-terminal coiled-coils frequently activate systems by rearrangements of the interdimer active site. The variety of sensory domains that modulate this structural equilibrium in response to different stimuli highlights the importance of DGCs in bacterial adaptation. One interesting example of sensor DGCs is blue light-activated light-oxygen-voltage (LOV)-GGDEF couples. Here, we describe molecular details of a two-stage mechanism that allows tight dark-state inhibition while enabling high enzymatic activities upon illumination, achieving fold changes exceeding 10,000-fold. Using an in vivo activity assay, we screened amino acid substitutions at the inhibitory interface and the sensor-effector linker region to identify variants that promote enzymatic activity in the dark. In combination with chimeras of LOV and GGDEF domains preventing inhibitory interface formation, we successfully stabilized elongated active-state conformations and confirmed the role of the inhibitory interface between sensor and effector in the tight dark-state inhibition. Interestingly, the initially generated chimeras are still light regulatable as long as the linker sequence is not stabilized in either inhibiting or stimulating coiled-coil register. Our results offer valuable insights for potential optogenetic applications but also demonstrate inherent challenges associated with Methylotenera sp. LOV-activated DGCs.
2.
Improving T cell expansion by optogenetically engineered bacteria-loaded MMP-2-responsive cyclophosphamide for antitumor immunotherapy.
Abstract:
The efficacy of antitumor immunotherapy is closely associated with the expansion of tumor-infiltrating CD8+ T cells. However, within the tumor microenvironment, CD8+ T cells often exhibit reduced proliferation due to persistent exposure to tumor antigens. The cytokine IL-2 is a potent growth factor that can drive the expansion of tumor-infiltrating lymphocytes. While its clinical application has been severely limited by systemic toxicity and in vivo instability. To address these challenges, we have developed a dual-responsive system (EcNIL-2@UCNP/Gel-CTX) leveraging the hypoxic tropisms of E. coli Nissle 1917(EcN). This system is capable of producing IL-2 in situ upon near-infrared (NIR) irradiation and releasing low-dose cyclophosphamide (CTX) in response to matrix metalloproteinase-2 (MMP-2) in the tumor microenvironment. The EcNIL-2@UCNP/Gel-CTX system not only drives the expansion of CD8+ T cells and boost the activity of NK cells but also reduces Treg cell populations, thereby remodeling the immune microenvironment and eliciting robust tumor-specific immune responses in H22 subcutaneous tumors in mice and confers long-term protection against tumor rechallenge by promoting the generation of durable memory T cells. Our findings provide an both light and tumor microenvironment responsive platform for enhanced cancer immunotherapy.
3.
Phase-driven rewiring in Escherichia coli enhances coenzyme Q10 biosynthesis via temporal and energetic coordination.
Abstract:
Coenzyme Q10 biosynthesis in Escherichia coli is constrained by kinetic mismatches between precursor synthesis and methylation, alongside bioenergetic uncoupling. We implemented an optogenetic phase-control strategy integrating dynamic light induction, ribosome binding site (RBS) engineering, and real-time membrane potential (ΔΨ) feedback. Temporal coordination of 1-deoxy-D-xylulose-5-phosphate synthase (DXS) and UbiG methyltransferase (UbiG) via a 6-h phase delay reduced methylglyoxal shunt flux by 41 ± 3% (p < 0.01) through enhanced precursor channeling. Membrane hyperpolarization to - 90 ± 2 mV (relative to - 70 mV in controls) triggered voltage-gated UbiG membrane localization (62 ± 3%) and ATP-driven S-adenosylmethionine regeneration, increasing methylation efficiency 2.3-fold. Multivariate modeling identified ΔΨ and acetate as critical control parameters, enabling optimized fermentation (dissolved oxygen (DO) 15-20%, pH 6.7-6.9). The engineered strain achieved 0.63 ± 0.07 g/L CoQ10 in 5-L bioreactors-a 4.3-fold improvement over the static control strain (0.15 ± 0.02 g/L)-with 82.5% carbon efficiency and 25.8% glycerol-to-product yield. This work establishes bioenergetically coupled temporal control as a scalable paradigm for membrane-bound isoprenoid biomanufacturing. KEY POINTS: • Phase-driven enzyme synchronization via optogenetics resolves kinetic mismatch. • Membrane hyperpolarization gates enzyme localization and ATP regeneration. • Model-integrated bioenergetic-process control enhances CoQ10 production efficiency.
4.
An Engineered Living Material with pro-angiogenic activity inducible by near-infrared light.
Abstract:
Impaired angiogenesis is a central barrier in the treatment of chronic and deep tissue wounds, preventing progression through the normal healing cascade. While the combination of near-infrared (NIR) photobiomodulation and pro-angiogenic growth factors has shown synergistic therapeutic benefit, the clinical translation of growth factor therapy is hindered by high cost, instability and the need for localized dosing to avoid aberrant vasculature. Peptidomimetics such as the VEGF-derived QK peptide offer a more stable and predictable alternative, but still require a means for localized, tunable presentation. Here, we establish an engineered living material based delivery system that responds to clinically relevant NIR light to produce and releases a QK-Fusion protein directly at the target site. The probiotic Escherichia coli Nissle 1917 was engineered with an 800 nm-responsive optogenetic circuit and encapsulated within an optimized alginate core–shell hydrogel that ensures biocontainment while allowing controlled outward diffusion of the secreted peptide. The released peptide remains non-cytotoxic and capable of binding extracellular matrix analogs and promoting the formation of organized, branched capillary-like networks in endothelial cultures. We thus establish a strategy for developing engineered living materials towards remote-controlled angiogenic stimulation.
5.
A tool for modeling gene regulatory networks (GRN_modeler) and its applications to synthetic biology.
Abstract:
Modeling and simulating gene regulatory networks (GRNs) is crucial for understanding biological processes, predicting system behavior, interpreting experimental data and guiding the design of synthetic systems. In synthetic biology, GRNs are fundamental to enable the design and control of complex functions. However, GRN simulations can be time-consuming and often require specialized expertise. To address this challenge, we developed GRN_modeler - a user-friendly tool with a graphical user interface that enables users without programming experience to create phenomenological models, while also offering command-line support for advanced users. GRN_modeler supports the analysis of both dynamical behaviors and spatial pattern formation. We demonstrate its versatility through several examples in synthetic biology, including the design of novel oscillator families capable of robust oscillation with an even number of nodes, complementing the classical repressilator family, which requires odd-numbered nodes. Furthermore, we showcase how GRN_modeler allowed us to develop a light-detecting biosensor in Escherichia coli that tracks light intensity over several days and leaves a record in the form of ring patterns in bacterial colonies.
6.
De novo designed protein guiding targeted protein degradation.
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Li, Z
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Qiao, G
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Wang, X
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Wang, M
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Cheng, J
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Hu, G
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Li, X
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Wu, J
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Liu, J
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Gao, C
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Liu, L
Abstract:
Targeted protein degradation is a powerful tool for biological research, cell therapy, and synthetic biology. However, conventional methods often depend on pre-fused degrons or chemical degraders, limiting their wider applications. Here we develop a guided protein labeling and degradation system (GPlad) in Escherichia coli, using de novo designed guide proteins and arginine kinase (McsB) for precise degradation of various proteins, including fluorescent proteins, metabolic enzymes, and human proteins. We expand GPlad into versatile tools such as antiGPlad, OptoGPlad, and GPTAC, enabling reversible inhibition, optogenetic regulation, and biological chimerization. The combination of GPlad and antiGPlad allows for programmable circuit construction, including ON/OFF switches, signal amplifiers, and oscillators. OptoGPlad-mediated degradation of MutH accelerates E. coli evolution under protocatechuic acid stress, reducing the required generations from 220 to 100. GPTAC-mediated degradation of AroE enhanced the titer of 3-dehydroshikimic acid to 92.6 g/L, a 23.8% improvement over the conventional CRISPR interference method. We provide a tunable, plug-and-play strategy for straightforward protein degradation without the need for pre-fusion, with substantial implications for synthetic biology and metabolic engineering.
7.
Single-cell characterization of bacterial optogenetic Cre recombinases.
Abstract:
Microbial optogenetic tools can regulate gene expression with high spatial and temporal precision, offering excellent potential for single-cell resolution studies. However, bacterial optogenetic systems have primarily been deployed for population-level experiments. It is not always clear how these tools perform in single cells, where stochastic effects can be substantial. In this study, we focus on optogenetic Cre recombinase and systematically compare the performance of three variants (OptoCre-REDMAP, OptoCre-Vvd, and PA-Cre) for their population-level and single-cell activity. We quantify recombination efficiency, expression variability, and activation dynamics using reporters which produce changes in fluorescence or antibiotic resistance following light-induced Cre activity. Our results indicate that optogenetic recombinase performance can be reporter-dependent, suggesting that this is an important consideration in system design. Further, our single-cell analysis reveals highly heterogeneous activity across cells. Although general trends match expectations for mean levels of light-dependent recombination, we found substantial variation in this behavior across individual cells. In addition, our results show that the timing of recombinase activity is highly variable from cell to cell. These findings suggest critical criteria for selecting appropriate optogenetic recombinase systems and indicate areas for optimization to improve the single-cell capabilities of bacterial optogenetic tools.
8.
Digitizing the Blue Light-Activated T7 RNA Polymerase System with a tet-Controlled Riboregulator.
Abstract:
Optogenetic systems offer precise control over gene expression, but leaky activity in the dark limits their dynamic range and, consequently, their applicability. Here, we enhanced an optogenetic system based on a split T7 RNA polymerase fused to blue-light-inducible Magnets by incorporating a tet-controlled riboregulatory module. This module exploits the photosensitivity of anhydrotetracycline and the designability of synthetic small RNAs to digitize light-controlled gene expression, implementing a repressive action over the translation of a polymerase fragment gene that is relieved with blue light. Our engineered system exhibited 13-fold improvement in dynamic range upon blue light exposure, which even raised to 23-fold improvement when using cells preadapted to chemical induction. As a functional demonstration, we implemented light-controlled antibiotic resistance in bacteria. Such integration of regulatory layers represents a suitable strategy for engineering better circuits for light-based biotechnological applications.
9.
Optimized Phage Display-Based Selection for the Development of Heterodimerizing Optogenetic Tools.
Abstract:
Multiple display techniques, including phage display, mRNA display, and ribosome display, have been used to expand the optogenetic toolbox beyond what nature provides. These techniques are most often applied to the development of binding partners that selectively recognize different conformational states of photoswitchable proteins. However, for some targets, in particular the spectrally diverse cyanobacteriochrome (CBCR) GAF domain family, the subtle differences between conformational states pose a significant challenge to discovering highly selective binders. We present an optimized phage display-based protocol designed to effectively capture these subtle changes. This optimized protocol applies high selection pressure by changing the elution method and tightening negative selection, leading to the enrichment of selective binders. Through multiple selection campaigns, we demonstrate the utility of this protocol for identifying highly selective binders.
10.
A Robust and Orthogonal Far-Red Light Sensor for Gene Expression Control in Escherichia coli.
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Sun, Y
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Xu, M
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Wang, B
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Xia, C
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He, Z
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Lu, B
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Cui, J
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Liao, Q
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Xu, Q
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Gan, F
Abstract:
Optogenetics has emerged as a powerful tool for regulating cellular processes due to its noninvasive nature and precise spatiotemporal control. Far-red light (FRL) has increasingly been used in the optogenetic control of mammalian cells due to its low toxicity and high tissue penetration. However, robust and orthogonal FRL sensors are lacking in bacteria. Here, we established an orthogonal FRL sensor in Escherichia coli with a maximum dynamic range exceeding 230-fold based on the RfpA-RfpC-RfpB (RfpABC) signaling system that regulates the far-red light photoacclimation (FaRLiP) in cyanobacteria. We identified a conserved DNA motif in the promoter sequences of the Chl f synthase gene and other genes in the FaRLiP gene clusters, termed the far-red light-regulatory (FLR) motif, which enables the light-responsive activation of gene expression through its interaction with RfpB. Based on the FLR motif, we simplified the FLR-containing promoters and characterized their activation abilities and dynamic ranges, which can be utilized in different synthetic biology scenarios. Additionally, one or two FLR motifs are present at other loci within the FaRLiP gene cluster, providing further FRL-inducible promoter resources. The FRL sensor exhibits effective activation and suppression under low-intensity FRL and white light, respectively, and remains functional in darkness. In conclusion, this study advances the understanding of the regulatory mechanisms of FaRLiP in cyanobacteria and provides robust and orthogonal FRL sensors for synthetic biology applications.
11.
A dual light-controlled co-culture system enables the regulation of population composition.
Abstract:
With the development of metabolic engineering, increasing requirements for efficient microbial biosynthesis call for establishment of multi-strain co-culture system. Dynamic regulation of population ratios is crucial for optimizing bioproduction performance. Optogenetic systems with high universality and flexibility have the potential to realize dynamic control of population proportion. In this study, we utilized an optimized chromatic acclimation sensor/regulator (CcaS/R) system and a blue light-activated YF1-FixJ-PhlF system as induction modules. A pair of orthogonal quorum sensing systems and a toxin-antitoxin system were employed as communication module and effector module, respectively. By integrating these modules, we developed a dual light-controlled co-culture system that enables dynamic regulation of population ratios. This co-culture system provides a universal toolkit for applications in metabolic engineering and synthetic biology.
12.
Light-dependent modulation of protein localization and function in living bacteria cells.
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McQuillen, R
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Perez, AJ
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Yang, X
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Bohrer, CH
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Smith, EL
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Chareyre, S
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Tsui, HT
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Bruce, KE
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Hla, YM
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McCausland, JW
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Winkler, ME
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Goley, ED
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Ramamurthi, KS
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Xiao, J
Abstract:
Most bacteria lack membrane-enclosed organelles and rely on macromolecular scaffolds at different subcellular locations to recruit proteins for specific functions. Here, we demonstrate that the optogenetic CRY2-CIB1 system from Arabidopsis thaliana can be used to rapidly direct proteins to different subcellular locations with varying efficiencies in live Escherichia coli cells, including the nucleoid, the cell pole, the membrane, and the midcell division plane. Such light-induced re-localization can be used to rapidly inhibit cytokinesis in actively dividing E. coli cells. We further show that CRY2-CIBN binding kinetics can be modulated by green light, adding a new dimension of control to the system. Finally, we test this optogenetic system in three additional bacterial species, Bacillus subtilis, Caulobacter crescentus, and Streptococcus pneumoniae, providing important considerations for this system's applicability in bacterial cell biology.
13.
In situ production and precise release of bioactive GM-CSF and siRNA by engineered bacteria for macrophage reprogramming in cancer immunotherapy.
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Wang, Y
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Fan, Y
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Zhang, X
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Liu, J
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Sun, D
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Li, L
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Bai, G
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Liu, X
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Kang, J
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Zhang, Y
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Wang, H
Abstract:
In the immunosuppressive tumor microenvironment (TME), tumor-associated macrophages (TAMs) predominantly exhibit an immunosuppressive M2 phenotype, which facilitates tumor proliferation and metastasis. Although current strategies aimed at reprogramming TAMs hold promise, their sustainability and effectiveness are limited due to repeated injections. Herein, a bacterial therapy platform containing two engineered strains was developed. One strain was engineered to produce and secrete granulocyte-macrophage colony-stimulating factor (GM-CSF) to promote M2-like TAMs repolarization to M1-like TAMs, while the other strain was designed to secrete small interfering RNA (siRNA) targeting signal regulatory protein α (SIRPα). The two strains can continuously and efficiently produce bioactive therapeutic agents in situ, exerting a sustained and synergistic therapeutic effect in TAMs to inhibit tumor growth. To enhance treatment efficacy, optogenetic strategy was implemented to effectively control the production of GM-CSF, and outer membrane vesicles (OMVs) produced by engineered bacteria were utilized to protect the siRNA from degradation in the external environment. The experimental results indicated that the bacterial therapy platform could continuously produce and release bioactive GM-CSF and SIRPα siRNA, exhibiting significant therapeutic activity. In vivo experiments further demonstrated that this platform showed more sustained and stable therapeutic effects compared to conventional drug therapies. Additionally, the combination of these two engineered strains yielded the highest ratio of M1/M2 TAMs (0.80) and the lowest ratio of F4/80+SIRPα+TAMs (3.46 %) than single strain therapy. Our study expanded the potential of engineered bacteria as pharmaceutical factories for in vivo therapeutic applications.
14.
Dynamic heterogeneity in an E. coli stress response regulon mediates gene activation and antimicrobial peptide tolerance.
Abstract:
The bacterial stress response is an intricately regulated system that plays a critical role in cellular resistance to drug treatment. The complexity of this response is further complicated by cell-to-cell heterogeneity in the expression of bacterial stress response genes. These genes are often organized into networks comprising one or more transcriptional regulators that control expression of a suite of downstream genes. While the expression heterogeneity of many of these upstream regulators has been characterized, the way in which this variability affects the larger downstream stress response remains hard to predict, prompting two key questions. First, how does heterogeneity and expression noise in stress response regulators propagate to the diverse downstream genes in their regulons. Second, when expression levels vary, how do multiple downstream genes act together to protect cells from stress. To address these questions, we focus on the transcription factor PhoP, a critical virulence regulator which coordinates pathogenicity in several gram-negative species. We use optogenetic stimulation to precisely control PhoP expression levels and examine how variations in PhoP affect the downstream activation of genes in the PhoP regulon. We find that these downstream genes exhibit differences both in mean expression level and sensitivity to increasing levels of PhoP. These response functions can also vary between individual cells, increasing heterogeneity in the population. We tie these variations to cell survival when bacteria are exposed to a clinically-relevant antimicrobial peptide, showing that high expression of the PhoP-regulon gene pmrD provides a protective effect against Polymyxin B. Overall, we demonstrate that even subtle heterogeneity in expression of a stress response regulator can have clear consequences for enabling bacteria to survive stress.
15.
Red Light Responsive Cre Recombinase for Bacterial Optogenetics.
Abstract:
Optogenetic tools have been used in a wide range of microbial engineering applications that benefit from the tunable, spatiotemporal control that light affords. However, the majority of current optogenetic constructs for bacteria respond to blue light, limiting the potential for multichromatic control. In addition, other wavelengths offer potential benefits over blue light, including improved penetration of dense cultures and reduced potential for toxicity. In this study, we introduce OptoCre-REDMAP, a red light inducible Cre recombinase system in Escherichia coli. This system harnesses the plant photoreceptors PhyA and FHY1 and a split version of Cre recombinase to achieve precise control over gene expression and DNA excision. We optimized the design by modifying the start codon of Cre and characterized the impact of different levels of induction to find conditions that produced minimal basal expression in the dark and induced full activation within 4 h of red light exposure. We characterized the system's sensitivity to ambient light, red light intensity, and exposure time, finding OptoCre-REDMAP to be reliable and flexible across a range of conditions. In coculture experiments with OptoCre-REDMAP and the blue light responsive OptoCre-VVD, we found that the systems responded orthogonally to red and blue light inputs. Direct comparisons between red and blue light induction with OptoCre-REDMAP and OptoCre-VVD demonstrated the superior penetration properties of red light. OptoCre-REDMAP's robust and selective response to red light makes it suitable for advanced synthetic biology applications, particularly those requiring precise multichromatic control.
16.
Optimizing HMG-CoA Synthase Expression for Enhanced Limonene Production in Escherichia coli through Temporal Transcription Modulation Using Optogenetics.
Abstract:
Overexpression of a single enzyme in a multigene heterologous pathway may be out of balance with the other enzymes in the pathway, leading to accumulated toxic intermediates, imbalanced carbon flux, reduced productivity of the pathway, or an inhibited growth phenotype. Therefore, optimal, balanced, and synchronized expression levels of enzymes in a particular metabolic pathway is critical to maximize production of desired compounds while maintaining cell fitness in a growing culture. Furthermore, the optimal intracellular concentration of an enzyme is determined by the expression strength, specific timing/duration, and degradation rate of the enzyme. Here, we modulated the intracellular concentration of a key enzyme, namely HMG-CoA synthase (HMGS), in the heterologous mevalonate pathway by tuning its expression level and period of transcription to enhance limonene production in Escherichia coli. Facilitated by the tuned blue-light inducible BLADE/pBad system, we observed that limonene production was highest (160 mg/L) with an intermediate transcription level of HMGS from moderate light illumination (41 au, 150 s ON/150 s OFF) throughout the growth. Owing to the easy penetration and removal of blue-light illumination from the growing culture which is hard to obtain using conventional chemical-based induction, we further explored different induction patterns of HMGS under strong light illumination (2047 au, 300 s ON) for different durations along the growth phases. We identified a specific timing of HMGS expression in the log phase (3-9 h) that led to optimal limonene production (200 mg/L). This is further supported by a mathematical model that predicts several periods of blue-light illumination (3-9 h, 0-9 h, 3-12 h, 0-12 h) to achieve an optimal expression level of HMGS that maximizes limonene production and maintains cell fitness. Compared to moderate and prolonged transcription (41 au, 150 s ON/150 s OFF, 0-73 h), strong but time-limited transcription (2047 au, 300 s ON, 3-9 h) of HMGS could maintain its optimal intracellular concentration and further increased limonene production up to 92% (250 mg/L) in the longer incubation (up to 73 h) without impacting cell fitness. This work has provided new insight into the "right amount" and "just-in-time" expression of a critical metabolite enzyme in the upper module of the mevalonate pathway using optogenetics. This study would complement previous findings in modulating HMGS expression and potentially be applicable to heterologous production of other terpenoids in E. coli.
17.
Optogenetic patterning generates multi-strain biofilms with spatially distributed antibiotic resistance.
Abstract:
Spatial organization of microbes in biofilms enables crucial community function such as division of labor. However, quantitative understanding of such emergent community properties remains limited due to a scarcity of tools for patterning heterogeneous biofilms. Here we develop a synthetic optogenetic toolkit 'Multipattern Biofilm Lithography' for rational engineering and orthogonal patterning of multi-strain biofilms, inspired by successive adhesion and phenotypic differentiation in natural biofilms. We apply this toolkit to profile the growth dynamics of heterogeneous biofilm communities, and observe the emergence of spatially modulated commensal relationships due to shared antibiotic protection against the beta-lactam ampicillin. Supported by biophysical modeling, these results yield in-vivo measurements of key parameters, e.g., molecular beta-lactamase production per cell and length scale of antibiotic zone of protection. Our toolbox and associated findings provide quantitative insights into the spatial organization and distributed antibiotic protection within biofilms, with direct implications for future biofilm research and engineering.
18.
Three-Color Protein Photolithography with Green, Red, and Far-Red Light.
Abstract:
Protein photolithography is an invaluable tool for generating protein microchips and regulating interactions between cells and materials. However, the absence of light-responsive molecules that allow for the copatterning of multiple functional proteins with biocompatible visible light poses a significant challenge. Here, a new approach for photopatterning three distinct proteins on a single surface by using green, red, and far-red light is reported. The cofactor of the green light-sensitive protein CarH is engineered such that it also becomes sensitive to red and far-red light. These new cofactors are shown to be compatible with two CarH-based optogenetic tools to regulate bacterial cell-cell adhesions and gene expression in mammalian cells with red and far-red light. Further, by incorporating different CarH variants with varying light sensitivities in layer-by-layer (LbL) multiprotein films, specific layers within the films, along with other protein layers on top are precisely removed by using different colors of light, all with high spatiotemporal accuracy. Notably, with these three distinct colors of visible light, it is possible to incorporate diverse proteins under mild conditions in LbL films based on the reliable interaction between Ni2+- nitrilotriacetic acid (NTA) groups and polyhistidine-tags (His-tags)on the proteins and their subsequent photopatterning. This approach has potential applications spanning biofabrication, material engineering, and biotechnology.
19.
Light-driven synchronization of optogenetic clocks.
Abstract:
Synthetic genetic oscillators can serve as internal clocks within engineered cells to program periodic expression. However, cell-to-cell variability introduces a dispersion in the characteristics of these clocks that drives the population to complete desynchronization. Here, we introduce the optorepressilator, an optically controllable genetic clock that combines the repressilator, a three-node synthetic network in E. coli, with an optogenetic module enabling to reset, delay, or advance its phase using optical inputs. We demonstrate that a population of optorepressilators can be synchronized by transient green light exposure or entrained to oscillate indefinitely by a train of short pulses, through a mechanism reminiscent of natural circadian clocks. Furthermore, we investigate the system's response to detuned external stimuli observing multiple regimes of global synchronization. Integrating experiments and mathematical modeling, we show that the entrainment mechanism is robust and can be understood quantitatively from single cell to population level.
20.
Simultaneous spectral illumination of microplates for high-throughput optogenetics and photobiology.
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Vogt, A
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Paulat, R
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Parthier, D
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Just, V
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Szczepek, M
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Scheerer, P
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Xu, Q
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Möglich, A
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Schmitz, D
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Rost, BR
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Wenger, N
Abstract:
The biophysical characterization and engineering of optogenetic tools and photobiological systems has been hampered by the lack of efficient methods for spectral illumination of microplates for high-throughput analysis of action spectra. Current methods to determine action spectra only allow the sequential spectral illumination of individual wells. Here we present the open-source RainbowCap-system, which combines LEDs and optical filters in a standard 96-well microplate format for simultaneous and spectrally defined illumination. The RainbowCap provides equal photon flux for each wavelength, with the output of the LEDs narrowed by optical bandpass filters. We validated the RainbowCap for photoactivatable G protein-coupled receptors (opto-GPCRs) and enzymes for the control of intracellular downstream signaling. The simultaneous, spectrally defined illumination provides minimal interruption during time-series measurements, while resolving 10 nm differences in the action spectra of optogenetic proteins under identical experimental conditions. The RainbowCap is also suitable for studying the spectral dependence of light-regulated gene expression in bacteria, which requires illumination over several hours. In summary, the RainbowCap provides high-throughput spectral illumination of microplates, while its modular, customizable design allows easy adaptation to a wide range of optogenetic and photobiological applications.
21.
From resonance to chaos by modulating spatiotemporal patterns through a synthetic optogenetic oscillator.
Abstract:
Oscillations are a recurrent phenomenon in biological systems across scales, but deciphering their fundamental principles is very challenging. Here, we tackle this challenge by redesigning the wellcharacterised synthetic oscillator known as “repressilator” in Escherichia coli and controlling it using optogenetics, creating the “optoscillator”. Bacterial colonies manifest oscillations as spatial ring patterns. When we apply periodic light pulses, the optoscillator behaves as a forced oscillator and we systematically investigate the properties of the rings under various light conditions. Combining experiments with mathematical modeling, we demonstrate that this simple oscillatory circuit can generate complex dynamics that are transformed into distinct spatial patterns. We report the observation of synchronisation, resonance, subharmonic resonance and period doubling. Furthermore, we present evidence of a chaotic regime. This work highlights the intricate spatiotemporal patterns accessible by synthetic oscillators and underscores the potential of our approach in revealing fundamental principles of biological oscillations.
22.
Sequential delivery of photosensitizers and checkpoint inhibitors by engineered bacteria for enhanced cancer photodynamic immunotherapy.
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Liu, X
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Fan, Y
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Zhang, X
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Li, L
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Yang, C
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Ma, X
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Bai, G
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Sun, D
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Wang, Y
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Wang, J
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Li, Y
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Shi, Y
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Liu, J
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Zhang, Y
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Wang, H
Abstract:
Engineered bacteria-based cancer therapy has increasingly been considered to be a promising therapeutic strategy due to the development of synthetic biology. Wherein, engineering bacteria-mediated photodynamic therapy (PDT)-immunotherapy shows greater advantages and potential in treatment efficiency than monotherapy. However, the unsustainable regeneration of photosensitizers (PSs) and weak immune responses limit the therapeutic efficiency. Herein, we developed an engineered bacteria-based delivery system for sequential delivery of PSs and checkpoint inhibitors in cancer PDT-immunotherapy. The biosynthetic pathway of 5-aminolevulinic acid (5-ALA) was introduced into Escherichia coli, yielding a supernatant concentration of 172.19 mg/L after 10 h of growth. And another strain was endowed with the light-controllable releasement of anti-programmed cell death-ligand 1 nanobodies (anti-PD-L1). This system exhibited a collaborative effect, where PDT initiated tumor cell death and the released tumor cell fragments stimulated immunity, followed by the elimination of residual tumor cells. The tumor inhibition rate reached 74.97%, and the portion of activated T cells and inflammatory cytokines were reinforced. The results demonstrated that the engineered bacteria-based collaborative system could sequentially deliver therapeutic substance and checkpoint inhibitors, and achieve good therapeutic therapy. This paper will provide a new perspective for the cancer PDT-immunotherapy.
23.
Bacteria-based cascade in situ near-infrared nano-optogenetically induced photothermal tumor therapy.
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Hu, X
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Chen, J
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Qiu, Y
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Chen, S
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Liu, Y
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Yu, X
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Liu, Y
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Yang, X
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Zhang, Y
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Zhu, Y
Abstract:
Rationale: Optogenetically engineered facultative anaerobic bacteria exhibit a favorable tendency to colonize at solid tumor sites and spatiotemporally-programmable therapeutics release abilities, attracting extensive attention in precision tumor therapy. However, their therapeutic efficacy is moderate. Conventional photothermal agents with high tumor ablation capabilities exhibit low tumor targeting efficiency, resulting in significant off-target side effects. The combination of optogenetics and photothermal therapy may offer both tumor-targeting and excellent tumor-elimination capabilities, which unfortunately has rarely been investigated. Herein, we construct a bacteria-based cascade near-infrared optogentical-photothermal system (EcNαHL-UCNPs) for enhanced tumor therapy. Methods: EcNαHL-UCNPs consists of an optogenetically engineered Escherichia coli Nissle 1917 (EcN) conjugated with lanthanide-doped upconversion nanoparticles (UCNPs), which are capable of locally secreting α-hemolysin (αHL), a pore-forming protein, in responsive to NIR irradiation. Anti-tumor effects of EcNαHL-UCNPs were determined in both H22 and 4T1 tumors. Results: The αHL not only eliminates tumor cells, but more importantly disrupts endothelium to form thrombosis as an in situ photothermal agent in tumors. The in situ formed thrombosis significantly potentiates the photothermic ablation of H22 tumors upon subsequent NIR light irradiation. Besides, αHL secreted by EcNαHL-UCNPs under NIR light irradiation not only inhibits 4T1 tumor growth, but also suppresses metastasis of 4T1 tumor via inducing the immune response. Conclusion: Our studies highlight bacteria-based cascade optogenetical-photothermal system for precise and effective tumor therapy.
24.
Induction of bacterial expression at the mRNA level by light.
Abstract:
Vital organismal processes, including development, differentiation and adaptation, involve altered gene expression. Although expression is frequently controlled at the transcriptional stage, various regulation mechanisms operate at downstream levels. Here, we leverage the photoreceptor NmPAL to optogenetically induce RNA refolding and the translation of bacterial mRNAs. Blue-light-triggered NmPAL binding disrupts a cis-repressed mRNA state, thereby relieves obstruction of translation initiation, and upregulates gene expression. Iterative probing and optimization of the circuit, dubbed riboptoregulator, enhanced induction to 30-fold. Given action at the mRNA level, the riboptoregulator can differentially regulate individual structural genes within polycistronic operons. Moreover, it is orthogonal to and can be wed with other gene-regulatory circuits for nuanced and more stringent gene-expression control. We thus advance the pAurora2 circuit that combines transcriptional and translational mechanisms to optogenetically increase bacterial gene expression by >1000-fold. The riboptoregulator strategy stands to upgrade numerous regulatory circuits and widely applies to expression control in microbial biotechnology, synthetic biology and materials science.
25.
OptoLacI: optogenetically engineered lactose operon repressor LacI responsive to light instead of IPTG.
Abstract:
Optogenetics' advancement has made light induction attractive for controlling biological processes due to its advantages of fine-tunability, reversibility, and low toxicity. The lactose operon induction system, commonly used in Escherichia coli, relies on the binding of lactose or isopropyl β-d-1-thiogalactopyranoside (IPTG) to the lactose repressor protein LacI, playing a pivotal role in controlling the lactose operon. Here, we harnessed the light-responsive light-oxygen-voltage 2 (LOV2) domain from Avena sativa phototropin 1 as a tool for light control and engineered LacI into two light-responsive variants, OptoLacIL and OptoLacID. These variants exhibit direct responsiveness to light and darkness, respectively, eliminating the need for IPTG. Building upon OptoLacI, we constructed two light-controlled E. coli gene expression systems, OptoE.coliLight system and OptoE.coliDark system. These systems enable bifunctional gene expression regulation in E. coli through light manipulation and show superior controllability compared to IPTG-induced systems. We applied the OptoE.coliDark system to protein production and metabolic flux control. Protein production levels are comparable to those induced by IPTG. Notably, the titers of dark-induced production of 1,3-propanediol (1,3-PDO) and ergothioneine exceeded 110% and 60% of those induced by IPTG, respectively. The development of OptoLacI will contribute to the advancement of the field of optogenetic protein engineering, holding substantial potential applications across various fields.