Award details

Enabling synthetic biology with an expanded library of engineered orthogonal genetic logic gates and switches

ReferenceBB/N007212/1
Principal Investigator / Supervisor Dr Baojun Wang
Co-Investigators /
Co-Supervisors
Institution University of Edinburgh
DepartmentSch of Biological Sciences
Funding typeResearch
Value (£) 346,308
StatusCompleted
TypeResearch Grant
Start date 01/07/2016
End date 30/06/2019
Duration36 months

Abstract

The project aims to engineer an expanded library of versatile orthogonal genetic building blocks to enable advanced cellular signal processing capability needed to fulfil the potential of synthetic biology. To achieve this, we will focus on repurposing two new scalable genetic tools, split inteins and CRISPR RNA-guided gene regulation, to engineer libraries of orthogonal genetic logic gates and switches. We will also build multi-layered genetic programs from these orthogonal blocks to implement large-scale complex transcriptional control functions in a single cell. First, an expanded library of orthogonal NAND, AND gates will be built based on trans-splicing inteins of transcriptional repressors and activators. A number of candidate orthogonal transcription activators, repressors and split inteins will be mined and characterised from both reported literature and bioinformatic search. By splitting a transcriptional repressor or activator, with each split intein controlled by a separate promoter, a NAND or AND gate is formed. Next, a library of XOR gates will be generated via intein-split orthogonal sigma and anti-sigma factors. We will then apply model-guided construction to engineer the largest ever logic computing circuit- 1-bit full adder that comprises 5 genetic logic gates wired in 3 layers. Second, orthogonal NOR gates and cascaded programs will be engineered via CRISPR-dCas9 regulated looping of bacterial enhancer-dependent promoters. A library of orthogonal NOR gates with two distinct input small guide RNAs will be obtained via directing catalytic inactive dCas9 protein to the unbound loop regions of synthetic s54-dependent promoters, leading to interruption of transcription required DNA looping induced by enhancer binding proteins. Next, complex programs comprising multi-layered NOR gates will be designed to precisely and rapidly tune gene expression profiles in the violacein pathway in response to external chemical inputs under various logic combinations.

Summary

An important goal of synthetic biology is the rational design and predictable implementation of synthetic gene circuits using standardised and interchangeable parts to program cellular behaviour. However, unlike electronic digital circuits, the components in a biological circuit are not connected by wires with physical insulation, and the flow of biological information has to depend on their specific chemical interactions to avoid cross talk. As a result, the same genetic part may not be used twice in one integrated system to prevent the potential unintended interactions between them. Therefore, orthogonal parts and modules are necessary for the compatibility and scalable design of large gene circuits comprising many components. Orthogonality implies that the newly added parts and modules should not cross-talk with those present in the engineered biological systems as well as the host genetic background. Most of the gene circuits constructed so far are small scale systems that have been constructed by costly and inefficient 'trial-and-error' methods with very limited parts. For example, it has taken almost 12 years to progress from the first 3-gene toggle switch to the so far largest constructed 11-gene 4-input AND logic gate in a single cell. A hard truth behind this slowness is that the engineering of complex circuits in living cells is currently limited by the availability of well-characterised and orthogonal (non cross-talk) genetic regulatory building blocks. Hence, an urgent need in synthetic biology is to expand the currently limited toolbox of biological parts with many functional orthogonal elements to scale up our capacity for building large and complex circuits. Nevertheless, it remains a big foundational challenge to expand the range of available orthogonal components in the synthetic biology toolbox. This project aims to address this challenge by developing two novel scalable tools to engineer an expanded library of versatile orthogonal genetic building blocks. In particular, we will build a library of modular and orthogonal genetic NAND and NOR logic gates; these are universal logic gates and their combinations can be used to accomplish any arbitrary complex Boolean logic operations, providing a powerful scalable method for cellular process control. Further, we will create multi-layer genetic programs from different permutations of these engineered logic gates to demonstrate the potential for composing high-order signal processing and transcriptional control functions in a single cell. For example, the engineered genetic programs will be used to implement a high level logic computing device - 1 bit full adder that intake three chemical inputs in specified logic manners to produce two optical outputs. In addition, we will demonstrate that large complex transcriptional control programs can be implemented in a microbial cell factory to precisely and rapidly tune gene expression profiles within the biosynthesis pathway of a high value chemical (violacein). The engineered scalable tools from this study will increase significantly the number of orthogonal control elements, gates and wires in the limited toolbox of synthetic biology, leading to large-scale complex genetic control programs attainable to program advanced behaviours in cells. The successful outcome will lead to a number of applications expected in the biotechnology industry (high gain), and will be of enormous benefit to researchers not only in the synthetic biology and but also in bioengineering communities and those in the biotechnology industry.

Impact Summary

The proposed research falls into the BBSRC strategic priority areas of Synthetic Biology and Developing New Technologies for the Biosciences, which hold great promise for applications in sectors such as industrial biotechnology, the environment and healthcare, and are strategically important sectors for the economic future of the UK. As referred in the UK Synthetic Biology Roadmap, a recent assessment performed by BCC Research Inc. predicts the scale of global market of synthetic biology, will grow from $1.6 bn in 2011 up to $10.8 bn by the year 2016. To achieve this economic goal and its growth momentum, new enabling tools and technologies have to be developed to facilitate the design and fabrication of large scale genetic programs with complex functions in a modular and scalable manner. This project aims to develop a new generation of synthetic biology tools for enabling programmable and scalable complex gene expression and signal processing control capacity in model E. coli chassis microorganism. The engineered scalable tools will significantly expand the currently limited toolkit available for synthetic biologists and bioengineers to advance the engineering of large genetic control systems with complex functions. The successful outcome will transform the present state of gene network engineering by directly addressing a key bottleneck in the field. The technology may lead to applications in a range of industrial biotechnological areas that would benefit from the programmable advanced control of gene expression and cell behaviour, such as the life sciences research tools and reagents, microbe-based biologics bioproduction, in vivo bioprocess control and optimisation, and cell-based therapy sectors. Hence the developed tools and technology will have wide impact in the synthetic biology and bioengineering communities by generating new scalable circuit design tools and methods, novel expanded sets of orthogonal regulatory components and information processingmodules to assist the maturation of the emerging field of synthetic biology. The project will contribute to maintaining UK leadership in this strategic area and the national economical growth. The work will be of extreme importance to researchers working at the interface of biology and engineering, and those in biotechnology industry. Potential patentable circuit designs and tools could be generated that might be of great interest to biotechnological sector and we will patent promising designs and technologies as they become available.
Committee Research Committee C (Genes, development and STEM approaches to biology)
Research TopicsMicrobiology, Synthetic Biology, Technology and Methods Development
Research PriorityX – Research Priority information not available
Research Initiative X - not in an Initiative
Funding SchemeX – not Funded via a specific Funding Scheme
terms and conditions of use (opens in new window)
export PDF file