| Literature DB >> 35788565 |
James P B Lloyd1, Florence Ly1, Patrick Gong1, Jahnvi Pflueger2, Tessa Swain2, Christian Pflueger1,2, Elliott Fourie1, Muhammad Adil Khan1, Brendan N Kidd1, Ryan Lister3,4.
Abstract
Plant biotechnology predominantly relies on a restricted set of genetic parts with limited capability to customize spatiotemporal and conditional expression patterns. Synthetic gene circuits have the potential to integrate multiple customizable input signals through a processing unit constructed from biological parts to produce a predictable and programmable output. Here we present a suite of functional recombinase-based gene circuits for use in plants. We first established a range of key gene circuit components compatible with plant cell functionality. We then used these to develop a range of operational logic gates using the identify function (activation) and negation function (repression) in Arabidopsis protoplasts and in vivo, demonstrating their utility for programmable manipulation of transcriptional activity in a complex multicellular organism. Specifically, using recombinases and plant control elements, we activated transgenes in YES, OR and AND gates and repressed them in NOT, NOR and NAND gates; we also implemented the A NIMPLY B gate that combines activation and repression. Through use of genetic recombination, these circuits create stable long-term changes in expression and recording of past stimuli. This highly compact programmable gene circuit platform provides new capabilities for engineering sophisticated transcriptional programs and previously unrealized traits into plants.Entities:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35788565 DOI: 10.1038/s41587-022-01383-2
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nat Biotechnol ISSN: 1087-0156 Impact factor: 68.164