Abstract
AbstractIn order to increase our command over genetically engineered bacterial populations in bioprocessing and therapy, synthetic regulatory circuitry needs to enable the temporal programming of a number of consecutive functional tasks without external interventions. In this context, we have engineered a genetic circuit encoding an autonomous but chemically tunable timer inEscherichia coli, based on the concept of a transcription factor cascade mediated by the cytoplasmic dilution of repressors. As proof-of-concept, we used this circuit to impose a time-resolved two-staged synthetic pathway composed of a production-followed-by-lysis program, via a single input. Moreover, via a recombinase step, this synchronous timer was further engineered into an asynchronous timer in which the generational distance of differentiating daughter cells spawning off from a stem-cell like mother cell becomes a predictable driver and proxy for timer dynamics. Using this asynchronous timer circuit, a temporally defined population heterogeneity can be programmed in bacterial populations.Graphical abstract
Publisher
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory
Reference37 articles.
1. Metabolic engineering of microorganisms for the production of higher alcohols;Mbio,2014
2. Metabolic engineering of microorganisms for production of aromatic compounds
3. Metabolic engineering of microorganisms for biofuel production;Renew Sust Energ Rev,2018
4. Cellular agriculture — industrial biotechnology for food and materials;COBIOT,2020
5. Biotechnological production of bio-based long-chain dicarboxylic acids with oleogenious yeasts;WORLD J MICROB BIOT,2017