Systematic evaluation of genetic and environmental factors affecting performance of translational riboswitches

Ross Kent, Neil Dixon

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

Since their discovery riboswitches have been attractive tools for the use-controlled regulation of gene expression in bacterial systems. Riboswitches facilitate small molecule mediated fine-tuning of protein expression, making these tools of great use to the synthetic biology community. However, the use of riboswitches is often restricted due to context dependent performance, and limited dynamic range. Here we report the drastic improvement of a previously developed orthogonal riboswitch, achieved through in vivo functional selection and optimisation of flanking coding and non-coding sequences. The behaviour of the derived riboswitches was mapped under a wide array of growth and induction conditions, using a structured Design of Experiments approach. This approach successfully improved the maximal protein expression levels 8.2-fold relative to the original riboswitches and the dynamic range was improved to afford riboswitch dependent control of 80-fold. The optimised orthogonal riboswitch was then integrated downstream of four endogenous stress promoters, responsive to phosphate starvation, hyperosmotic stress, redox stress, and carbon starvation. These responsive stress promoter-riboswitch devices were demonstrated to allow for tuning of protein expression, up to ~650-fold in response to both environmental and cellular stress responses, and riboswitch dependent attenuation. We envisage that these riboswitch-stress responsive devices will be useful tools for the construction of advanced genetic circuits, bioprocessing and protein expression.
Original languageEnglish
JournalACS Synthetic Biology
Early online date21 Mar 2019
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 2019

Research Beacons, Institutes and Platforms

  • Manchester Institute of Biotechnology

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