| Literature DB >> 32078765 |
Adam D Silverman, Umut Akova, Khalid K Alam, Michael C Jewett1, Julius B Lucks1,2,3.
Abstract
Recent advances in cell-free synthetic biology have spurred the development of in vitro molecular diagnostics that serve as effective alternatives to whole-cell biosensors. However, cell-free sensors for detecting manmade organic water contaminants such as pesticides are sparse, partially because few characterized natural biological sensors can directly detect such pollutants. Here, we present a platform for the cell-free detection of one critical water contaminant, atrazine, by combining a previously characterized cyanuric acid biosensor with a reconstituted atrazine-to-cyanuric acid metabolic pathway composed of several protein-enriched bacterial extracts mixed in a one pot reaction. Our cell-free sensor detects atrazine within an hour of incubation at an activation ratio superior to previously reported whole-cell atrazine sensors. We also show that the response characteristics of the atrazine sensor can be tuned by manipulating the ratios of enriched extracts in the cell-free reaction mixture. Our approach of utilizing multiple metabolic steps, encoded in protein-enriched cell-free extracts, to convert a target of interest into a molecule that can be sensed by a transcription factor is modular. Our work thus serves as an effective proof-of-concept for a scheme of "metabolic biosensing", which should enable rapid, field-deployable detection of complex organic water contaminants.Entities:
Keywords: TX-TL; atrazine; biosensor; cell-free; cyanuric acid; metabolism; synthetic biology; transcription factor
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Year: 2020 PMID: 32078765 PMCID: PMC7341367 DOI: 10.1021/acssynbio.9b00388
Source DB: PubMed Journal: ACS Synth Biol ISSN: 2161-5063 Impact factor: 5.110