Abstract
ABSTRACTMetabolic heterogeneity, the occurrence of different metabolic phenotypes among cells, represents a key challenge in health and biotechnology. To unravel its molecular basis, tools probing metabolism of single cells are needed. While RNA devices harbor huge potential for the development of such tools, until today, it is challenging to create in vivo-functional sensors for any given metabolite. Here, we developed from scratch an RNA-based sensor for fructose-1,6-bisphosphate (FBP), a doubly phosphorylated intermediate of glycolysis. Starting from in vitro selection of an RNA aptamer and its structural analyses, we developed libraries of RNA-based regulatory devices with this aptamer and the hammerhead ribozyme as an actuator. Through FACS-seq-based high-throughput screening in yeast, we identified in vivo-functional FBP-sensing devices that generate fluorescent readout dependent on intracellular FBP concentration. As FBP reports the flux through glycolysis, the developed RNA device can be used to sense the glycolytic rate in single cells, offering unprecedented possibilities to investigate the causes of metabolic heterogeneity.
Publisher
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory
Cited by
2 articles.
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