4.7 Article

Modular Extracellular Sensor Architecture for Engineering Mammalian Cell-based Devices

Journal

ACS SYNTHETIC BIOLOGY
Volume 3, Issue 12, Pages 892-902

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/sb400128g

Keywords

mammalian synthetic biology; receptor engineering; biosensor; cell therapy

Funding

  1. Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency [W911NF-11-2-0066]
  2. Northwestern University Flow Cytometry Facility
  3. Cancer Center Support Grant [NCI CA060553]
  4. National Academies Keck Futures Initiative [NAKFI-SB6]

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Engineering mammalian cell-based devices that monitor and therapeutically modulate human physiology is a promising and emerging frontier in clinical synthetic biology. However, realizing this vision will require new technologies enabling engineered circuitry to sense and respond to physiologically relevant cues. No existing technology enables an engineered cell to sense exclusively extracellular ligands, including proteins and pathogens, without relying upon native cellular receptors or signal transduction pathways that may be subject to crosstalk with native cellular components. To address this need, we here report a technology we term a Modular Extracellular Sensor Architecture (MESA). This self-contained receptor and signal transduction platform is maximally orthogonal to native cellular processes and comprises independent, tunable protein modules that enable performance optimization and straightforward engineering of novel MESA that recognize novel ligands. We demonstrate ligand-inducible activation of MESA signaling, optimization of receptor performance using design-based approaches, and generation of MESA biosensors that produce outputs in the form of either transcriptional regulation or transcription-independent reconstitution of enzymatic activity. This systematic, quantitative platform characterization provides a framework for engineering MESA to recognize novel ligands and for integrating these sensors into diverse mammalian synthetic biology applications.

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