Synthetic in vitro transcriptional oscillators
- Creators
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Kim, Jongmin
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Winfree, Erik
Abstract
The construction of synthetic biochemical circuits from simple components illuminates how complex behaviors can arise in chemistry and builds a foundation for future biological technologies. A simplified analog of genetic regulatory networks, in vitro transcriptional circuits, provides a modular platform for the systematic construction of arbitrary circuits and requires only two essential enzymes, bacteriophage T7 RNA polymerase and Escherichia coli ribonuclease H, to produce and degrade RNA signals. In this study, we design and experimentally demonstrate three transcriptional oscillators in vitro. First, a negative feedback oscillator comprising two switches, regulated by excitatory and inhibitory RNA signals, showed up to five complete cycles. To demonstrate modularity and to explore the design space further, a positive-feedback loop was added that modulates and extends the oscillatory regime. Finally, a three-switch ring oscillator was constructed and analyzed. Mathematical modeling guided the design process, identified experimental conditions likely to yield oscillations, and explained the system's robust response to interference by short degradation products. Synthetic transcriptional oscillators could prove valuable for systematic exploration of biochemical circuit design principles and for controlling nanoscale devices and orchestrating processes within artificial cells.
Additional Information
© 2011 EMBO and Macmillan Publishers Limited. Molecular Systems Biology is an open-access journal published by European Molecular Biology Organization and Nature Publishing Group. This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-Noncommercial-No Derivative Works 3.0 Unported License. Received 3 August 2010; Accepted 13 December 2010; Published online 1 February 2011. We thank P Subsoontorn, E Franco, R Murray, E Friedrichs, R Jungmann, F Simmel, E Klavins, P Rothemund, G Seelig, R Hariadi, D Zhang, and B Yurke for discussion. This study was supported by ONR YIP award no. N000140110813; NSF award nos. 0103002, 0113443,0608889, 0832824 (The Molecular Programming Project); HFSP award no. RGY0074/2006-C, and the Caltech Center for Biological Circuit Design. The experimental work described here was initially reported in Kim (2007). As we were preparing this manuscript for publication, we became aware of another successful effort to construct a cell-free in vitro biochemical oscillator (Montagne et al, 2011). Author contributions: JK and EW designed the experiments; JK conducted the experiments; JK and EW analyzed the data; JK and EW wrote the paper.Attached Files
Published - Kim2011p13226Mol_Syst_Biol.pdf
Supplemental Material - msb2010119-s1.pdf
Supplemental Material - msb2010119-s2.zip
Files
Additional details
- PMCID
- PMC3063688
- Eprint ID
- 23200
- Resolver ID
- CaltechAUTHORS:20110401-112412294
- Office of Naval Research (ONR)
- N000140110813
- NSF
- CBET-0103002
- NSF
- CCF-0113443
- NSF
- CBET-0608889
- NSF
- CCF-0832824
- Human Frontier Science Program
- RGY0074/2006-C
- Caltech Center for Biological Circuit Design
- Created
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2011-04-01Created from EPrint's datestamp field
- Updated
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2021-11-09Created from EPrint's last_modified field