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Published April 2014 | Supplemental Material + Published
Journal Article Open

Synthetic biology tools for programming gene expression without nutritional perturbations in Saccharomyces cerevisiae

Abstract

A conditional gene expression system that is fast-acting, is tunable and achieves single-gene specificity was recently developed for yeast. A gene placed directly downstream of a modified GAL1 promoter containing six Zif268 binding sequences (with single nucleotide spacing) was shown to be selectively inducible in the presence of β-estradiol, so long as cells express the artificial transcription factor, Z_(3)EV (a fusion of the Zif268 DNA binding domain, the ligand binding domain of the human estrogen receptor and viral protein 16). We show the strength of Z_(3)EV-responsive promoters can be modified using straightforward design principles. By moving Zif268 binding sites toward the transcription start site, expression output can be nearly doubled. Despite the reported requirement of estrogen receptor dimerization for hormone-dependent activation, a single binding site suffices for target gene activation. Target gene expression levels correlate with promoter binding site copy number and we engineer a set of inducible promoter chassis with different input–output characteristics. Finally, the coupling between inducer identity and gene activation is flexible: the ligand specificity of Z3EV can be re-programmed to respond to a non-hormone small molecule with only five amino acid substitutions in the human estrogen receptor domain, which may prove useful for industrial applications.

Additional Information

© 2014 The Author(s). Published by Oxford University Press. This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/), which permits unrestricted reuse, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited. Received October 23, 2013; Revised December 8, 2013; Accepted December 20, 2013. First published online: January 20, 2014. We would like to acknowledge support provided by the Automated Strain Engineering group and Lab Services team at Amyris, Inc. We thank Chris Paddon, Tim Geistlinger, and Xin Wang for many lively discussions, David Pincus for providing the crippled CYC1 promoter sequence, and finally, Zhongxia Wang and Yuzhong Wang for their hospitality while this paper was being written. Funding: National Institutes of Health grant [GM046406 to D.B.]; NIGMS Center for Quantitative Biology grant [GM071508 to D.B.]. Funding for open access charge: National Institutes of Health grant [GM046406 to D.B.]. Conflict of interest statement. P.A. Gibney, S.S. Chandran, and K.R. Benjamin own shares of Amyris, Inc. D. Botstein is a member of the Scientific Advisory Board for Amyris, Inc.

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Published - McIsaac_2014.pdf

Supplemental Material - nar-03167-met-g-2013-File007.pdf

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Additional details

Created:
August 20, 2023
Modified:
October 25, 2023