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Expanding the toolbox of synthetic riboswitches with guanine-dependent aptazymes
Author(s) -
Julia Stifel,
Maike Spöring,
Jörg S. Hartig
Publication year - 2019
Publication title -
synthetic biology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
ISSN - 2397-7000
DOI - 10.1093/synbio/ysy022
Subject(s) - ribozyme , riboswitch , aptamer , synthetic biology , guanine , computational biology , computer science , biology , rna , gene , non coding rna , genetics , nucleotide
Artificial riboswitches based on ribozymes serve as versatile tools for ligand-dependent gene expression regulation. Advantages of these so-called aptazymes are their modular architecture and the comparably little coding space they require. A variety of aptamer-ribozyme combinations were constructed in the past 20 years and the resulting aptazymes were applied in diverse contexts in prokaryotic and eukaryotic systems. Most in vivo functional aptazymes are OFF-switches, while ON-switches are more advantageous regarding potential applications in e.g. gene therapy vectors. We developed new ON-switching aptazymes in the model organism Escherichia coli and in mammalian cell culture using the intensely studied guanine-sensing xpt aptamer. Utilizing a high-throughput screening based on fluorescence-activated cell sorting in bacteria we identified up to 9.2-fold ON-switches and OFF-switches with a dynamic range up to 32.7-fold. For constructing ON-switches in HeLa cells, we used a rational design approach based on existing tetracycline-sensitive ON-switches. We discovered that communication modules responding to tetracycline are also functional in the context of guanine aptazymes, demonstrating a high degree of modularity. Here, guanine-responsive ON-switches with a four-fold dynamic range were designed. Summarizing, we introduce a series of novel guanine-dependent ribozyme switches operative in bacteria and human cell culture that significantly broaden the existing toolbox.

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