4.7 Article

Sigma Factor-Mediated Tuning of Bacterial Cell-Free Synthetic Genetic Oscillators

Journal

ACS SYNTHETIC BIOLOGY
Volume 7, Issue 12, Pages 2879-2887

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acssynbio.8b00300

Keywords

oscillator; cell-free systems; synthetic biology; sigma factors; competition-induced regulation

Funding

  1. TOPPUNT grant from The Netherlands Organization for Scientific Research (NWO)
  2. European Research Council, ERC [677313 BioCircuit]
  3. NWO-VIDI grant from The Netherlands Organization for Scientific Research (NWO) [723.016.003]
  4. Ministry of Education, Culture and Science (Gravity programs) [024.001.035, 024.003.013]

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Cell-free transcription-translation provides a simplified prototyping environment to rapidly design and study synthetic networks. Despite the presence of a well characterized toolbox of genetic elements, examples of genetic networks that exhibit complex temporal behavior are scarce. Here, we present a genetic oscillator implemented in an E. coli-based cell-free system under steady-state conditions using microfluidic flow reactors. The oscillator has an activator-repressor motif that utilizes the native transcriptional machinery of E. coli: the RNAP and its associated sigma factors. We optimized a kinetic model with experimental data using an evolutionary algorithm to quantify the key regulatory model parameters. The functional modulation of the RNAP was investigated by coupling two oscillators driven by competing sigma factors, allowing the modification of network properties by means of passive transcriptional regulation.

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