Yijie Deng, Hannah E Maurais, Kai Etheridge, Rahul Sarpeshkar
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
Achieving consistent and predictable gene expression from plasmids remains challenging. While much attention has focused on intra-genetic elements like promoters and ribosomal binding sites, the spatial arrangement of genes within plasmids-referred to as gene syntax-also plays a crucial role in shaping gene expression dynamics. This study addresses the largely overlooked impact of gene syntaxes on gene expression variability and accuracy. Utilizing a dual-fluorescent protein system, we systematically investigated how different gene orientations and orders affect expression profiles including mean levels, relative expression ratios, and cell-to-cell variations. We found that arbitrary gene placement on a plasmid can cause significantly different expression means and ratios. Genes aligned in the same direction as a plasmid's origin of replication (Ori) typically exhibit higher expression levels; adjacent genes in the divergent orientation tend to suppress each other's expression; altering gene order without changing orientation can yield varied expression. Despite unchanged total cell-to-cell variation across different syntaxes, gene syntaxes can also influence intrinsic and extrinsic noise. Interestingly, cell-to-cell variation appears to depend on the reporter proteins, with RFP consistently showing higher variation than GFP. Moreover, the effects of gene syntax can propagate to downstream circuits, strongly affecting the performance of incoherent feedforward loops and contributing to unpredictable outcomes in genetic networks. Our findings reveal that gene syntaxes on plasmids modulate gene expression and circuit behavior, providing valuable insights for the rational design of plasmids and genetic circuits.
期刊介绍:
Biological engineering is an emerging discipline that encompasses engineering theory and practice connected to and derived from the science of biology, just as mechanical engineering and electrical engineering are rooted in physics and chemical engineering in chemistry. Topical areas include, but are not limited to:
Synthetic biology and cellular design
Biomolecular, cellular and tissue engineering
Bioproduction and metabolic engineering
Biosensors
Ecological and environmental engineering
Biological engineering education and the biodesign process
As the official journal of the Institute of Biological Engineering, Journal of Biological Engineering provides a home for the continuum from biological information science, molecules and cells, product formation, wastes and remediation, and educational advances in curriculum content and pedagogy at the undergraduate and graduate-levels.
Manuscripts should explore commonalities with other fields of application by providing some discussion of the broader context of the work and how it connects to other areas within the field.