| Literature DB >> 34354989 |
Megan A McSweeney1, Mark P Styczynski1.
Abstract
Cell-free expression systems (CFEs) are cutting-edge research tools used in the investigation of biological phenomena and the engineering of novel biotechnologies. While CFEs have many benefits over in vivo protein synthesis, one particularly significant advantage is that CFEs allow for gene expression from both plasmid DNA and linear expression templates (LETs). This is an important and impactful advantage because functional LETs can be efficiently synthesized in vitro in a few hours without transformation and cloning, thus expediting genetic circuit prototyping and allowing expression of toxic genes that would be difficult to clone through standard approaches. However, native nucleases present in the crude bacterial lysate (the basis for the most affordable form of CFEs) quickly degrade LETs and limit expression yield. Motivated by the significant benefits of using LETs in lieu of plasmid templates, numerous methods to enhance their stability in lysate-based CFEs have been developed. This review describes approaches to LET stabilization used in CFEs, summarizes the advancements that have come from using LETs with these methods, and identifies future applications and development goals that are likely to be impactful to the field. Collectively, continued improvement of LET-based expression and other linear DNA tools in CFEs will help drive scientific discovery and enable a wide range of applications, from diagnostics to synthetic biology research tools.Entities:
Keywords: DNA aptamers; cell-free expression; genetic circuits; linear expression template; nuclease inhibition; rapid prototyping
Year: 2021 PMID: 34354989 PMCID: PMC8329657 DOI: 10.3389/fbioe.2021.715328
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Bioeng Biotechnol ISSN: 2296-4185
FIGURE 1Strategies for preparing DNA templates for use in cell-free expression systems. Traditional plasmid cloning protocols involving construct assembly, transformation, screening, and plasmid purification take days to complete. Linear expression templates can be made via PCR from genomic DNA or plasmid templates and used directly after amplicon verification and purification, drastically reducing DNA template preparation time.
FIGURE 2Approaches used to increase expression yield from LETs. (A) Bacteria can be genetically modified prior to lysate extraction either by deletion of nuclease genes or by the fusion of affinity peptides to nuclease genes for later removal during lysate processing. Both methods aim to produce a lysate with negligible nuclease activity. (B) Nuclease inhibitors can be added to cell-free reactions to mitigate activity of specific nucleases. This effect can be achieved with direct RecBCD inhibitors such as GamS, Chi DNA, and certain small molecules, or via the addition of DNA-binding proteins that interact with the LETs. (C) The LET can also be modified to better protect the construct from nuclease degradation: methylation of PCR-generated LETs can mimic the chemistry of native DNA, phosphorothioate linkages can be added to the ends of LETs via modified primers, or amplicons with appropriately designed primers can be recircularized prior to CFE.
Effectiveness of different nuclease inhibition strategies quantified by their ability to improve LET-based expression in E. coli CFEs. Values with an asterisk were inferred from figures in the corresponding reference.
| LET stabilization approach | Improvement | Metric | References | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| Δ | 3–6x | Fold change from WT strain |
|
| Affinity tag removal of RecD and PNPase | 4x | Fold change from WT strain |
| |
|
| GamS | 37.6% | Percentage of plasmid expression |
|
| Chi DNA | 23%* | Percentage of plasmid expression |
| |
| Small molecule RecBCD inhibitors | 250%* (CID 697851) 300%* (CID 1517823) | Percent increase from no inhibitor |
| |
| ssCro | 23% | Percentage of plasmid expression |
| |
| Ku | 8%* | Percentage of plasmid expression |
| |
|
| DNA methylation | 32% ( | Percent increase from unmethylated LET |
|
| Terminal phosphorothioate (PT) linkages (x2) | 36%* | Percent increase from unmodified LET |
| |
| 3′-tail mRNA secondary structures | 92%* (poly(G) tail) 265%* (T7 terminator) | Percent increase from LETs lacking 3′ secondary structures |
| |
FIGURE 3Comparison of the impacts of degradation on LETs vs DNA aptamers in CFEs. LETs benefit from downstream amplification steps, leading to continued protein synthesis even after complete LET degradation. Aptamers, however, must be present and intact to execute their function as they do not serve as templates for amplification.