Qr: author:"Ankana Kakoti"
Showing 1 - 2 of 2 results
1.
Aptamer-Mediated Reversible Transactivation of Gene Expression by Light.
Abstract:
The investigation and manipulation of cellular processes with subcellular resolution requires non-invasive tools with spatiotemporal precision and reversibility. Building on the interaction of the photoreceptor PAL with an RNA aptamer, we describe a variation of the CRISPR/dCAS9 system for light-controlled activation of gene expression. This platform significantly reduces the coding space required for genetic manipulation and provides a strong on-switch with almost no residual activity in the dark. It adds to the current set of modular building blocks for synthetic biological circuit design and is broadly applicable.
2.
A blue light receptor that mediates RNA binding and translational regulation.
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Weber, AM
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Kaiser, J
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Ziegler, T
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Pilsl, S
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Renzl, C
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Sixt, L
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Pietruschka, G
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Moniot, S
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Kakoti, A
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Juraschitz, M
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Schrottke, S
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Lledo Bryant, L
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Steegborn, C
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Bittl, R
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Mayer, G
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Möglich, A
Abstract:
Sensory photoreceptor proteins underpin light-dependent adaptations in nature and enable the optogenetic control of organismal behavior and physiology. We identified the bacterial light-oxygen-voltage (LOV) photoreceptor PAL that sequence-specifically binds short RNA stem loops with around 20 nM affinity in blue light and weaker than 1 µM in darkness. A crystal structure rationalizes the unusual receptor architecture of PAL with C-terminal LOV photosensor and N-terminal effector units. The light-activated PAL-RNA interaction can be harnessed to regulate gene expression at the RNA level as a function of light in both bacteria and mammalian cells. The present results elucidate a new signal-transduction paradigm in LOV receptors and conjoin RNA biology with optogenetic regulation, thereby paving the way toward hitherto inaccessible optoribogenetic modalities.