Abstract
AbstractFor various research questions in metabolism, it is highly desirable to have means available, with which the flux through specific pathways can be perturbed dynamically, in a reversible manner, and at a timescale that is consistent with the fast turnover rates of metabolism. Optogenetics, in principle, offers such possibility. Here, we developed an initial version of a photo-switchable isocitrate dehydrogenase (IDH) aimed at controlling the metabolic flux through the citric acid cycle in budding yeast. By inserting a protein-based light switch (LOV2) into computationally identified active/regulatory-coupled sites of IDH and by using in vivo screening in Saccharomyces cerevisiae, we obtained a number of IDH enzymes whose activity can be switched by light. Subsequent in-vivo characterization and optimization resulted in an initial version of photo-switchable (PS) IDH. While further improvements of the enzyme are necessary, our study demonstrates the efficacy of the overall approach from computational design, via in vivo screening and characterization. It also represents one of the first few examples, where optogenetics were used to control the activity of a metabolic enzyme.
Publisher
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory
Cited by
3 articles.
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