4.7 Article

Obtaining a Panel of Cascade Promoter-5′-UTR Complexes in Escherichia coli

Journal

ACS SYNTHETIC BIOLOGY
Volume 6, Issue 6, Pages 1065-1075

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acssynbio.7b00006

Keywords

metabolic engineering; promoter engineering; RT-qPCR; RNA-seq; synthetic biology; 5 '-UTR

Funding

  1. Major State Basic Research Development Program of China (973 Program) [2013CB733602]
  2. National Natural Science Foundation of China [21390204, 31370130, 31670095]
  3. Key Technologies R&D Program of Jiangsu Province, China [BE2014698]
  4. Fundamental Research Funds for the Central Universities [JUSRP51701A]
  5. 111 Project [111-2-06]

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A promoter is one of the most important and basic tools used to achieve diverse synthetic biology goals. Escherichia coli is one of the most commonly used model organisms in synthetic biology to produce useful target products and establish complicated regulation networks. During the fine-tuning of metabolic or regulation networks, the limited number of well-characterized inducible promoters has made implementing complicated strategies difficult. In this study, 104 native promoter-5'-UTR complexes (PUTR) from E. coli were screened and characterized based on a series of RNA-seq data. The strength of the 104 PUTRs varied from 0.007% to 4630% of that of the P-BAD promoter in the transcriptional level and from 0.1% to 137% in the translational level. To further upregulate gene expression, a series of combinatorial PUTRs and cascade PUTRs were constructed by integrating strong transcriptional promoters with strong translational 5'-UTRs. Finally, two combinatorial PUTRs (P-ssrA-UTRTrpsT and P-dnaKJ-UTRrpsT) and two cascade PUTRs (PUTRssrA,-PUTRinfc-rplt and PUTRalsRBACE-PUTRinfC-rplT) were identified as having the highest activity, with expression outputs of 170%, 137%, 409%, and 203% of that of the PBA, promoter, respectively. These engineered PUTRs are stable for the expression of different genes, such as the red fluorescence protein gene and the beta-galactosidase gene. These results show that the PUTRs characterized and constructed in this study may be useful as a plug-and-play synthetic biology toolbox to achieve complicated metabolic engineering goals in fine-tuning metabolic networks to produce target products.

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