4.7 Article

A Model for the Spatiotemporal Design of Gene Regulatory Circuits

Journal

ACS SYNTHETIC BIOLOGY
Volume 8, Issue 9, Pages 2007-2016

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acssynbio.9b00022

Keywords

mathematical modeling gene regulation; diffusion; synthetic biology; biophysics; biodesign; genetic circuits

Funding

  1. SynBio3D project of the UK Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council (EPSRC) [EP/R019002/1]
  2. European CSA on biological standardization BIOROBOOST (EU) [820699]
  3. EPSRC [EP/R019002/1] Funding Source: UKRI

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Mathematical modeling assists the design of synthetic regulatory networks by providing a detailed mechanistic understanding of biological systems. Models that can predict the performance of a design are fundamental for synthetic biology since they minimize iterations along the design-build-test lifecycle. Such predictability depends crucially on what assumptions (i.e., biological simplifications) the model considers. Here, we challenge a common assumption when it comes to the modeling of bacterial-based gene regulation: considering negligible the effects of intracellular physical space. It is commonly assumed that molecules, such as transcription factors (TF), are homogeneously distributed inside a cell, so there is no need to model their diffusion. We describe a mathematical model that accounts for molecular diffusion and show how simulations of network performance are decisively affected by the distance between its components. Specifically, the model focuses on the search by a TF for its target promoter. The combination of local searches, via one-dimensional sliding along the chromosome, and global searches, via three-dimensional diffusion through the cytoplasm, determine TF-promoter interplay. Previous experimental results with engineered bacteria in which the distance between TF source and target was minimized or enlarged were successfully reproduced by the spatially resolved model we introduce here. This suggests that the spatial specification of the circuit alone can be exploited as a design parameter in synthetic biology to select programmable output levels.

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