Abhinav Pujar, Amit Pathania, Corbin Hopper, Amir Pandi, Cristian Ruiz Calderón, Matthias Függer, Thomas Nowak, Manish Kushwaha
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
Coordinated actions of cells in microbial communities and multicellular organisms enable them to perform complex tasks otherwise difficult for single cells. This has inspired biological engineers to build cellular consortia for larger circuits with improved functionalities while implementing communication systems for coordination among cells. Here, we investigate the signalling dynamics of a phage-mediated synthetic DNA messaging system and couple it with CRISPR interference to build distributed circuits that perform logic gate operations in multicellular bacterial consortia. We find that growth phases of both sender and receiver cells, as well as resource competition between them, shape communication outcomes. Leveraging the easy programmability of DNA messages, we build eight orthogonal signals and demonstrate that intercellular CRISPRi (i-CRISPRi) regulates gene expression across cells. Finally, we multiplex the i-CRISPRi system to implement several multicellular logic gates that involve up to seven cells and take up to three inputs simultaneously, with single- and dual-rail encoding: NOT, YES, AND and AND-AND-NOT. The communication system developed here lays the groundwork for implementing complex biological circuits in engineered bacterial communities, using phage signals for communication.
期刊介绍:
Nucleic Acids Research (NAR) is a scientific journal that publishes research on various aspects of nucleic acids and proteins involved in nucleic acid metabolism and interactions. It covers areas such as chemistry and synthetic biology, computational biology, gene regulation, chromatin and epigenetics, genome integrity, repair and replication, genomics, molecular biology, nucleic acid enzymes, RNA, and structural biology. The journal also includes a Survey and Summary section for brief reviews. Additionally, each year, the first issue is dedicated to biological databases, and an issue in July focuses on web-based software resources for the biological community. Nucleic Acids Research is indexed by several services including Abstracts on Hygiene and Communicable Diseases, Animal Breeding Abstracts, Agricultural Engineering Abstracts, Agbiotech News and Information, BIOSIS Previews, CAB Abstracts, and EMBASE.