| Literature DB >> 34469745 |
Jessica B Lee1, Leandra M Caywood1, Jennifer Y Lo1, Nicholas Levering1, Albert J Keung2.
Abstract
Biological information can be encoded within the dynamics of signaling components, which has been implicated in a broad range of physiological processes including stress response, oncogenesis, and stem cell differentiation. To study the complexity of information transfer across the eukaryotic promoter, we screened 119 dynamic conditions-modulating the pulse frequency, amplitude, and pulse width of light-regulating the binding of an epigenome editor to a fluorescent reporter. This system revealed tunable gene expression and filtering behaviors and provided a quantification of the limit to the amount of information that can be reliably transferred across a single promoter as ∼1.7 bits. Using a library of over 100 orthogonal chromatin regulators, we further determined that chromatin state could be used to tune mutual information and expression levels, as well as completely alter the input-output transfer function of the promoter. This system unlocks the information-rich content of eukaryotic gene regulation.Entities:
Keywords: chromatin; epigenome editing; mutual information; optogenetics; pulsatile; signal filtering; synthetic biology; transfer function
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Year: 2021 PMID: 34469745 PMCID: PMC8602734 DOI: 10.1016/j.cels.2021.08.003
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cell Syst ISSN: 2405-4712 Impact factor: 10.304