Engineering DNA nanotubes for resilience in an E. coli TXTL system
Author(s) -
Melissa A. Klocke,
Jonathan Garamella,
Hari K. K. Subramanian,
Vincent Noireaux,
Elisa Franco
Publication year - 2018
Publication title -
synthetic biology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.769
H-Index - 8
ISSN - 2397-7000
DOI - 10.1093/synbio/ysy001
Subject(s) - dna , recbcd , exonuclease , escherichia coli , microbiology and biotechnology , nanotechnology , chemistry , biophysics , computational biology , biology , dna repair , biochemistry , materials science , gene , dna polymerase
Deoxyribonucleic acid (DNA) nanotechnology is a growing field with potential intracellular applications. In this work, we use an Escherichia coli cell-free transcription–translation (TXTL) system to assay the robustness of DNA nanotubes in a cytoplasmic environment. TXTL recapitulates physiological conditions as well as strong linear DNA degradation through the RecBCD complex, the major exonuclease in E. coli. We demonstrate that chemical modifications of the tiles making up DNA nanotubes extend their viability in TXTL for more than 24 h, with phosphorothioation of the sticky end backbone being the most effective. Furthermore, we show that a Chi-site double-stranded DNA, an inhibitor of the RecBCD complex, extends DNA nanotube lifetime significantly. These complementary approaches are a first step toward a systematic prototyping of DNA nanostructures in active cell-free cytoplasmic environments and expand the scope of TXTL utilization for bioengineering.
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