| Literature DB >> 30518404 |
Zachary M Shaver1, Stephanie S Bent1, Steven R Bilby2, Michael Brown3, Anna Buser1, Itzayana G Cuellar1, Athena J Davis2, Lindsay Doolan2, Fatima C Enriquez1, Autumn Estrada3, Shelby Herner2, J Cody Herron1, Andrew M Hunn2, Madison Hunter1, Hartlee Johnston1, Owen Koucky1, Christian C Mackley2, Dylan Maghini1,4, Devin Mattoon3, Haden T McDonald3, Hannah Sinks1,4, Austin J Sprague3, David Sullivan3, Altan Tutar4, Avery Umphreys2, Chris Watson2, Daniel Zweerink3, Laurie J Heyer4, Jeffrey L Poet3, Todd T Eckdahl2, A Malcolm Campbell5.
Abstract
OBJECTIVE: The purpose of this project was to use an in vivo method to discover riboswitches that are activated by new ligands. We employed phage-assisted continuous evolution (PACE) to evolve new riboswitches in vivo. We started with one translational riboswitch and one transcriptional riboswitch, both of which were activated by theophylline. We used xanthine as the new target ligand during positive selection followed by negative selection using theophylline. The goal was to generate very large M13 phage populations that contained unknown mutations, some of which would result in new aptamer specificity. We discovered side products of three new theophylline translational riboswitches with different levels of protein production.Entities:
Keywords: M13; Metabolic engineering; Phage-assisted continuous evolution (PACE); Riboswitch; Synthetic biology; Theophylline; Xanthine
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Year: 2018 PMID: 30518404 PMCID: PMC6280357 DOI: 10.1186/s13104-018-3965-6
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Res Notes ISSN: 1756-0500
Fig. 1PACE experimental design for the discovery of new RSs. a During positive selection, anhydrotetracycline (aTc) concentration is reduced while the new target ligand xanthine concentration remained constant. Mutagenesis cassette is induced using arabinose. The chemostat replenishes growth media and uninfected E. coli. b Negative selection employed a dominant gIII negative allele (gIII neg) induced by a steady concentration of theophylline to select against theophylline-specific riboswitches while gradually reducing aTc to maintain phage with xanthine-specific riboswitches
Fig. 2Directed evolution of three new riboswitches. a Each new riboswitch was cloned into rClone Red and grown in triplicate over 10 h with one of three treatments as indicated. Each population was measured for RFP and cell density three times to produce an average end point value ± s.e.m. b Theophylline-induction values from three independent populations from a were normalized by comparing each construct to the fold induction of RS-C in the absence of theophylline. Error bars represent s.e.m
Fig. 3Predicted 2D structures of RS-C and three new riboswitches. a The original RS-C sequence (left) was submitted to mFold to produce a predicted 2D structure and quantification of stability (ΔG); the boxed region is the predicted RBS. The three new riboswitch sequences were also evaluated by mFold with RBS denoted by boxed nucleotides. Yellow highlighting shows inserted bases and the blue A within a box indicates a base substitution conserved in all three new riboswitches. b RNA base pairing (dashed lines) between ribosome (red) and the complementary anti-parallel riboswitch sequence (black) for the original RS-C as well as the three new RSs. The number of base pairs between rRNA and RS sequence is shown on the far right