- Engineering switch platforms as temporal and spatial cellular
biosensors
- Designing cellular information processing capabilities
- Designing ‘intelligent’ therapeutic molecules
- Metabolic engineering of Saccharomyces cerevisiae for
alkaloid production
- Integration of molecular switches into synthetic and endogenous
cellular networks
- Nucleic acid switches as molecular recognition components of
nanosensor devices
- Rapid generation and characterization of switches responsive to
novel molecular inputs
1. Engineering switch platforms as temporal and spatial cellular
biosensors.
Researchers: Andrew Babiskin, Travis Bayer, Chase
Beisel, Stephanie Culler, Katie Galloway, Kevin Hoff, Maung Nyan Win
We are exploring the design strategies
for constructing molecular switches that act in vivo as both biosensors
and ligand-controlled regulators of gene expression in bacteria, yeast,
and mammalian cell culture. Much of our effort is focused on the design
of nucleic acid-based molecular sensors, although the design of some
protein-based sensors is being explored as well. In the area of
trans-acting molecular switches, we are exploring the design of sensors
that act through diverse gene regulation mechanisms such as the RNA
interference (RNAi) pathway, ribozyme-based cleavage, and the antisense
pathway. In the area of cis-acting molecular switches, we are exploring
the design of sensors that act through regulatory mechanisms such as
alternative splicing, RNase III cleavage, ribozyme-based cleavage, and
internal ribosome entry site (IRES) activity.
In order to effectively
monitor information flow through cellular networks, projects are
examining different sensor platforms that can provide temporal and
spatial information regarding fluctuations in biomolecule levels. These
platforms couple molecular recognition of a ligand-binding event to a
conformational change in the sensor molecule. This regulated
conformational change is linked to an appropriate readout signal, which
enables these molecules to act as cellular biosensors. For example, the
output from a molecular binding event may be coupled to the regulation
of a targeted gene expression event. Therefore, these platforms enable
allosteric regulation of the activity of a general gene expression
platform, toward a target gene through the binding of a small molecule,
protein, or transcript input. Our work on ncRNA design demonstrates the
modularity, design predictability, and specificity inherent in these
molecules for cellular control. By modifying the input and output
modules on these platforms we can achieve user-specified probing and
programming of cellular events. By modifying the regulatory modules on
these platforms we can construct sensors with different temporal and
spatial resolution properties. For instance, projects are exploring
other sensor platforms built around the integration of nucleic
acid-based switches with protein-based sensors to develop rapidly
responsive biosensors that act through fluorescence resonance energy
transfer (FRET) signals. Protein-based switches are also being explored
that function through nuclear receptor-based transcriptional mechanisms.
Molecular design techniques are incorporating a combination of rational
design strategies and library-based screens.
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2. Designing
cellular information processing capabilities
Researchers: Katie
Galloway
We are constructing circuits of interacting molecular switches
to engineer complex cellular information processing capabilities.
Projects in this area explore the design strategies and parameters
necessary for programming higher-level cellular logic. Specifically,
efforts are currently focused on the design of different logic gates and
filtering circuits composed of molecular switches that regulate the
expression of a target gene in response to different combinations of
small molecule and protein inputs. Current projects are focused on the
construction of AND, OR, and NOR gates, which will later be combined to
build more complex information processing capabilities. In addition,
filtering circuits are being constructed to process distinct patterns of
cellular information. Due to the exhibited modular and programmable
nature of these switches, the molecular sensor components comprising
these signal integration circuits will be applied to project areas
described below in metabolic engineering and cellular programming.
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3. Designing ‘intelligent’ therapeutic molecules
Researchers: Chase
Beisel, Yvonne Chen, Leo d’Espaux
We are designing molecular switches to
act as targeted or ‘intelligent’ therapeutic molecules. Projects in this
area focus on the construction of ligand-regulated RNA-based regulators
of gene expression that function in mammalian cells through diverse
regulatory mechanisms such as the RNAi pathway or ribozyme-based
cleavage. Research areas have been initiated in the design of molecular
switches for advancing targeted breast cancer treatments and
immunotherapy strategies. In the area of developing next-generation
cancer therapies and detection strategies, RNA switches will be
constructed to take different hormone and growth factor biomarkers
identified for different breast cancers as input signals. In response to
the presence of particular set of biomarker indicative of breast cancer,
these molecules will regulate the expression of target output genes such
as genes involved in regulating cellular behavior (apoptosis, cancer
phenotype) or genes associated with a monitorable signal
(detection/diagnosis strategies). In the latter area, RNA switches will
be constructed to take target small molecules or biomarkers for
different tumor cells as input signals. These molecular switches will be
engineered into T cells and respond to the presence of these localized
inputs by activating the T cell to kill the nearby tumor cells, thereby
developing more effective and safe immunotherapy treatments. Cellular
engineering projects are currently being conducted in model cell lines
and will later effectively be transferred into animal models for these
diseases. Both of these projects have translational clinical
collaborators at the City of Hope (Professors Carlotta Glackin - breast
cancer therapies; Mike Jensen - T cell engineering).
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4. Metabolic
engineering of Saccharomyces cerevisiae for alkaloid production
Researchers: Kristy Hawkins, Maung Nyan Win
We are engineering synthetic
circuits in yeast for the production of different value-added compounds.
Current research efforts are focused on the development of Saccharomyces
cerevisiae as a microbial host for the total biosynthesis of diverse
alkaloid compounds. Synthetic metabolic pathways are being assembled for
the production of two different classes of alkaloids, the purine
alkaloids and the benzylisoquinoline alkaloids (BIAs). The purine
alkaloid pathway, resulting in the synthesis of caffeine and similar
analogs, is being engineered in yeast largely as a model pathway through
which to explore general design principles and strategies for
integrating molecular switches and assembling signal processing schemes
with synthetic metabolic pathways. Strategies will be developed for
applying these engineered molecular switches for establishing rapid and
generalizable pathway optimization screens and selections. Furthermore,
control theory will be used to explore the design parameters for
constructing dynamically regulated networks with switch-based control
loops as a way to optimize pathway flux. The purine alkaloid pathway
enables a more immediate demonstration of these strategies and design
principles as aptamers to these metabolites are readily available.
The BIA pathway, resulting in the synthesis of codeine, morphine, and sanguinarine, is being explored for generating a microbial host that can
(i) readily synthesize an array of BIA molecules with diverse
pharmacological activities and (ii) be used to set up rapid functional
genomics screens to effectively identify enzymes that can act on these
molecules from EST libraries of native plant hosts. The BIA pathway is
particularly appropriate to this type of metabolic engineering effort as
they are a complex class of molecules that are not effectively
synthesized through traditional chemical means. In addition, there is no
source for many of the intermediate metabolites of pharmaceutical
interest, as they do not accumulate in the native hosts and genetic
engineering efforts remain challenging in plants. As the pathway
including the early steps resulting in the synthesis of the BIA backbone
(norcoclaurine) has not been entirely elucidated from plant hosts, a
synthetic network composed of genes from bacteria, humans, and various
plants is being assembled and optimized for BIA production in yeast. It
is anticipated that the molecular tools developed in the purine alkaloid
pathway will be readily transferable to the BIA pathway. This research
effort has a plant biologist collaborator from the University of Calgary
(Peter Facchini).
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5. Integration of molecular switches into synthetic and
endogenous cellular networks
Researchers: Travis Bayer, Katie Galloway,
Kristy Hawkins
We are exploring the integration of different molecular
switch platforms into synthetic and endogenous cellular networks. These
research efforts focus on transferring from researcher-controlled model
inputs (for which sensor domains have previously been developed and
characterized) to target metabolite, enzyme, or transcript inputs.
Outputs that regulate reporter gene expression will enable these
molecular switches to serve as cellular biosensors, providing data
regarding information flow or flux through networks of interest. Outputs
that regulate target enzyme levels will be connected to two different
types of inputs. Inputs that are directly associated with the pathway of
interest, such as precursors or toxic intermediates in a synthetic
pathway, will enable dynamic control schemes. Inputs not associated with
a pathway output will be used to generate synthetic connections between
naturally unconnected pathways. In the area of synthetic networks,
efforts are focused on integrating switches as both real-time cellular
biosensors and dynamic regulators of gene expression with the purine
alkaloid and BIA pathways. In the area of endogenous networks, efforts
are focused on integrating switches into signal transduction pathways,
pathways associated with cell cycle and apoptosis, and pathways
associated with yeast mating type and differentiated cellular state.
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6. Nucleic acid switches as molecular recognition components of nanosensor
devices
Researchers: Arwen Brown
We are constructing nucleic acid-based
switches that will function as the molecular recognition components of
different nanosensor devices. These types of switches may provide an
alternative to antibody-based molecular sensors in that they are more
stable, easier to generate to diverse analytes of interest, and more
amenable to engineering strategies for integration into different
detection platforms. Research efforts have developed an amplifiable,
solution-based detection system, where the conformational change in the
molecular sensor upon analyte binding is coupled to an amplification
event. The output from this sensing event may be integrated into
existing microarray detection technologies for high-throughput,
multiplexed identification and quantification of small molecules and
proteins on a single platform. Future research efforts will explore the
integration of this amplifiable molecular detection system with
microfluidic devices. In addition, research efforts are exploring the
integration of these molecules with nanoelectromechanical systems (NEMS)
and nanowires. In the former platform, the device will convert the
mechanical input signal (realized as a change in conformational state
upon binding analyte) into an electrical signal, whereas in the latter
platform, the device will convert the charge input signal (realized as
binding of the switch molecule to the functionalized surface in the ‘ON’
state) into an electrical signal. Research efforts are focused on
establishing the design principles to optimize the mechanical or charge
input signal upon switching of the sensor from a bound to unbound state.
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7. Rapid generation and characterization of switches responsive to novel
molecular inputs
Researchers: Arwen Brown, Maung Nyan Win
We are
developing methods to rapidly generate and characterize new molecular
switches in a high-throughput manner. The sensor domains of the
molecular switches are aptamers or nucleic acid molecules able to bind
ligands with high specificity and affinity. In vitro and in vivo methods
are being developed to rapidly select for new sensor domains within the
switch platform. In vitro methods focus on the development of novel
capillary electrophoresis (CE)-based methods for selecting small
molecule- and protein-responsive switches. CE-based methods are
extremely effective at partitioning bound from unbound species, enabling
selection of novel sensor domains in fewer cycles and with greater
control over binding properties, such as equilibrium binding and kinetic
rate constants, than commonly employed affinity-based techniques. In
addition, by selecting sensor domains within the switch platform (and
therefore selecting indirectly for activity through conformational
changes) small molecule sensor domains will be generated with this
technique. In vivo methods are focused on the development of bacterial
and yeast library screening systems. In these systems functional sensor
domains are generated by assessing the activity of a switch indirectly
through its ability to regulate the expression of a fluorescent protein
in the presence and absence of the desired ligand molecule. This is a
generalizable screening system, as many of the engineered switch
platforms are transferable between bacteria, yeast, and mammalian cells
and the sensor domains within these platforms are modular and swappable
between platforms. Furthermore, small molecule and protein-responsive
switches, as well as switches responsive to post-translational
modification states and transcript levels, will be rapidly generated
through the in vivo screening strategies. Finally, high-throughput
surface plasmon resonance-based methods have been developed to precisely
and robustly characterize the equilibrium and kinetic binding properties
of these sensor domains either as aptamers or directly as switches.
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