4.8 Article

Contextual dependencies expand the re-usability of genetic inverters

Journal

NATURE COMMUNICATIONS
Volume 12, Issue 1, Pages -

Publisher

NATURE RESEARCH
DOI: 10.1038/s41467-020-20656-5

Keywords

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Funding

  1. SETH (MINECO/FEDER) [RTI2018-095584-B-C42]
  2. SYCOLIM (ERA-COBIOTECH 2018) Project of the Spanish Ministry of Science and Innovation [PCI2019-111859-2]
  3. European Union [820699, 870294]
  4. InGEMICS-CM Project of the Comunidad de Madrid - European Structural and Investment Funds - (FSE, FECER) [S2017/BMD-3691]
  5. SynBio3D project of the UK Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council [EP/R019002/1]
  6. Comunidad de Madrid (Atraccion de Talento Program) [2019-T1/BIO-14053]
  7. Severo Ochoa Program for Centres of Excellence in R&D from the Agencia Estatal de Investigacion of Spain [SEV-2016-0672]

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The implementation of Boolean logic circuits in cells is an active area in synthetic biology, with 20 genetic NOT gates characterized in seven different bacterial contexts to understand interoperability and portability. The study shows that the host context plays a crucial role in determining the performance of genetic circuits.
The implementation of Boolean logic circuits in cells have become a very active field within synthetic biology. Although these are mostly focussed on the genetic components alone, the context in which the circuit performs is crucial for its outcome. We characterise 20 genetic NOT logic gates in up to 7 bacterial-based contexts each, to generate 135 different functions. The contexts we focus on are combinations of four plasmid backbones and three hosts, two Escherichia coli and one Pseudomonas putida strains. Each gate shows seven different dynamic behaviours, depending on the context. That is, gates can be fine-tuned by changing only contextual parameters, thus improving the compatibility between gates. Finally, we analyse portability by measuring, scoring, and comparing gate performance across contexts. Rather than being a limitation, we argue that the effect of the genetic background on synthetic constructs expands functionality, and advocate for considering context as a fundamental design parameter. Genetic circuits can be engineered to generate predefined outcomes, however host context is a crucial factor in performance. Here the authors characterise twenty NOT gates in seven different bacteria to understand and predict interoperability and portability across hosts.

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