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1.
bioRxiv ; 2024 Feb 17.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38405763

Chimeric antigen receptor (CAR) T cells have made a tremendous impact in the clinic, but potent signaling through the CAR can be detrimental to treatment safety and efficacy. The use of protein degradation to control CAR signaling can address these issues in pre-clinical models. Existing strategies for regulating CAR stability rely on small molecules to induce systemic degradation. In contrast to small molecule regulation, genetic circuits offer a more precise method to control CAR signaling in an autonomous, cell-by-cell fashion. Here, we describe a programmable protein degradation tool that adopts the framework of bioPROTACs, heterobifunctional proteins that are composed of a target recognition domain fused to a domain that recruits the endogenous ubiquitin proteasome system. We develop novel bioPROTACs that utilize a compact four residue degron and demonstrate degradation of cytosolic and membrane protein targets using either a nanobody or synthetic leucine zipper as a protein binder. Our bioPROTACs exhibit potent degradation of CARs and can inhibit CAR signaling in primary human T cells. We demonstrate the utility of our bioPROTACs by constructing a genetic circuit to degrade the tyrosine kinase ZAP70 in response to recognition of a specific membrane-bound antigen. This circuit is able to disrupt CAR T cell signaling only in the presence of a specific cell population. These results suggest that bioPROTACs are a powerful tool for expanding the cell engineering toolbox for CAR T cells.

2.
bioRxiv ; 2024 Jan 15.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38293112

Synthetic and chimeric receptors capable of recognizing and responding to user-defined antigens have enabled "smart" therapeutics based on engineered cells. These cell engineering tools depend on antigen sensors which are most often derived from antibodies. Advances in the de novo design of proteins have enabled the design of protein binders with the potential to target epitopes with unique properties and faster production timelines compared to antibodies. Building upon our previous work combining a de novo-designed minibinder of the Spike protein of SARS-CoV-2 with the synthetic receptor synNotch (SARSNotch), we investigated whether minibinders can be readily adapted to a diversity of cell engineering tools. We show that the Spike minibinder LCB1 easily generalizes to a next-generation proteolytic receptor SNIPR that performs similarly to our previously reported SARSNotch. LCB1-SNIPR successfully enables the detection of live SARS-CoV-2, an improvement over SARSNotch which can only detect cell-expressed Spike. To test the generalizability of minibinders to diverse applications, we tested LCB1 as an antigen sensor for a chimeric antigen receptor (CAR). LCB1-CAR enabled CD8+ T cells to cytotoxically target Spike-expressing cells. Our findings suggest that minibinders represent a novel class of antigen sensors that have the potential to dramatically expand the sensing repertoire of cell engineering tools.

3.
Science ; 378(6625): eaba1624, 2022 12 16.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36520915

Chimeric antigen receptor (CAR) T cells are ineffective against solid tumors with immunosuppressive microenvironments. To overcome suppression, we engineered circuits in which tumor-specific synNotch receptors locally induce production of the cytokine IL-2. These circuits potently enhance CAR T cell infiltration and clearance of immune-excluded tumors, without systemic toxicity. The most effective IL-2 induction circuit acts in an autocrine and T cell receptor (TCR)- or CAR-independent manner, bypassing suppression mechanisms including consumption of IL-2 or inhibition of TCR signaling. These engineered cells establish a foothold in the target tumors, with synthetic Notch-induced IL-2 production enabling initiation of CAR-mediated T cell expansion and cell killing. Thus, it is possible to reconstitute synthetic T cell circuits that activate the outputs ultimately required for an antitumor response, but in a manner that evades key points of tumor suppression.


Immunosuppression Therapy , Immunotherapy, Adoptive , Interleukin-2 , Neoplasms , Receptors, Chimeric Antigen , T-Lymphocytes , Humans , Immunotherapy, Adoptive/methods , Interleukin-2/genetics , Interleukin-2/metabolism , Neoplasms/immunology , Neoplasms/therapy , Receptors, Antigen, T-Cell/genetics , T-Lymphocytes/immunology , T-Lymphocytes/transplantation , Tumor Microenvironment , Animals , Mice , Receptors, Chimeric Antigen/genetics , Receptors, Chimeric Antigen/metabolism , Cell Engineering , Receptors, Notch/metabolism , Immunosuppression Therapy/methods
4.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A ; 119(36): e2206825119, 2022 09 06.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36037352

Feedback control is a fundamental underpinning of life, underlying homeostasis of biological processes at every scale of organization, from cells to ecosystems. The ability to evaluate the contribution and limitations of feedback control mechanisms operating in cells is a critical step for understanding and ultimately designing feedback control systems with biological molecules. Here, we introduce CoRa-or Control Ratio-a general framework that quantifies the contribution of a biological feedback control mechanism to adaptation using a mathematically controlled comparison to an identical system that does not contain the feedback. CoRa provides a simple and intuitive metric with broad applicability to biological feedback systems.


Feedback, Physiological , Homeostasis , Models, Biological
5.
Nat Struct Mol Biol ; 28(9): 762-770, 2021 09.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34518698

Kinases play central roles in signaling cascades, relaying information from the outside to the inside of mammalian cells. De novo designed protein switches capable of interfacing with tyrosine kinase signaling pathways would open new avenues for controlling cellular behavior, but, so far, no such systems have been described. Here we describe the de novo design of two classes of protein switch that link phosphorylation by tyrosine and serine kinases to protein-protein association. In the first class, protein-protein association is required for phosphorylation by the kinase, while in the second class, kinase activity drives protein-protein association. We design systems that couple protein binding to kinase activity on the immunoreceptor tyrosine-based activation motif central to T-cell signaling, and kinase activity to reconstitution of green fluorescent protein fluorescence from fragments and the inhibition of the protease calpain. The designed switches are reversible and function in vitro and in cells with up to 40-fold activation of switching by phosphorylation.


Protein Serine-Threonine Kinases/metabolism , Protein-Tyrosine Kinases/metabolism , Amino Acid Motifs , Binding, Competitive , Calcium-Binding Proteins/pharmacology , Calpain/antagonists & inhibitors , Calpain/metabolism , Catalysis , Catalytic Domain , Cell Line , Cyclic AMP-Dependent Protein Kinases/metabolism , Drug Design , Genes, Synthetic , Green Fluorescent Proteins/chemistry , Green Fluorescent Proteins/metabolism , Humans , Hydrogen Bonding , Models, Molecular , Phosphorylation , Phosphotyrosine/metabolism , Protein Binding , Protein Conformation , Protein Domains , Protein Interaction Mapping , Protein Processing, Post-Translational , Protein Serine-Threonine Kinases/chemistry , Protein-Tyrosine Kinases/chemistry , Recombinant Proteins/genetics , Recombinant Proteins/metabolism , Signal Transduction , Structure-Activity Relationship , src-Family Kinases/metabolism
6.
Science ; 373(6550): 7, 2021 Jul 02.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34210855
7.
Cell Syst ; 12(6): 477-487, 2021 06 16.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34139160

We, and all organisms, are an evolutionary masterpiece of multiscale feedback control. Feedback loops enable our cells to grow and then stop at the right size, to divide and self-repair, and to respond with agility to their changing environment. Individual cells engage in long range extracellular feedback with other cells, ensuring continued homeostasis of our tissues and organs. Many long ranging feedback loops regulate vital physiological variables. Here, I will argue that focused efforts to understand the properties and constraints of biological feedback control networks should be central to the quest of understanding life. I will also propose many pressing challenges in this field and review conceptual frameworks that might be consequential for addressing them.


Models, Biological , Feedback , Homeostasis
8.
bioRxiv ; 2021 Apr 20.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33907743

The COVID-19 pandemic has demonstrated the need for exploring different diagnostic and therapeutic modalities to tackle future viral threats. In this vein, we propose the idea of sentinel cells, cellular biosensors capable of detecting viral antigens and responding to them with customizable responses. Using SARS-CoV-2 as a test case, we developed a live cell sensor (SARSNotch) using a de novo-designed protein binder against the SARS-CoV-2 Spike protein. SARSNotch is capable of driving custom genetically-encoded payloads in immortalized cell lines or in primary T lymphocytes in response to purified SARS-CoV-2 Spike or in the presence of Spike-expressing cells. Furthermore, SARSNotch is functional in a cellular system used in directed evolution platforms for development of better binders or therapeutics. In keeping with the rapid dissemination of scientific knowledge that has characterized the incredible scientific response to the ongoing pandemic, we extend an open invitation for others to make use of and improve SARSNotch sentinel cells in the hopes of unlocking the potential of the next generation of smart antiviral therapeutics.

9.
Cell Rep ; 34(11): 108854, 2021 03 16.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33730573

A near-constant feature of stress responses is a downregulation or arrest of the cell cycle, resulting in transient growth slowdown. To investigate the role of growth slowdown in the hyperosmotic shock response of S. cerevisiae, we perturbed the G1/S checkpoint protein Sic1 to enable osmo-stress response activation with diminished growth slowdown. We document that in this mutant, adaptation to stress is accelerated rather than delayed. This accelerated recovery of the mutant proceeds by liquidation of internal glycogen stores, which are then shunted into the osmo-shock response. Therefore, osmo-adaptation in wild-type cells is delayed because growth slowdown prevents full accessibility to cellular glycogen stores. However, faster adaptation comes at the cost of acute sensitivity to subsequent osmo-stresses. We suggest that stress-induced growth slowdown acts as an arbiter to regulate the resources devoted to osmo-shock, balancing short-term adaptation with long-term robustness.


Adaptation, Physiological , Osmotic Pressure , Saccharomyces cerevisiae/growth & development , Saccharomyces cerevisiae/metabolism , Stress, Physiological , Biocatalysis , Glycerol/metabolism , Glycogen/metabolism , Mutation/genetics , Phenotype , Saccharomyces cerevisiae Proteins/metabolism , Substrate Specificity , Time Factors
10.
Nat Commun ; 12(1): 292, 2021 01 12.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33436569

Stochastic fluctuations at the transcriptional level contribute to isogenic cell-to-cell heterogeneity in mammalian cell populations. However, we still have no clear understanding of the repercussions of this heterogeneity, given the lack of tools to independently control mean expression and variability of a gene. Here, we engineer a synthetic circuit to modulate mean expression and heterogeneity of transgenes and endogenous human genes. The circuit, a Tunable Noise Rheostat (TuNR), consists of a transcriptional cascade of two inducible transcriptional activators, where the output mean and variance can be modulated by two orthogonal small molecule inputs. In this fashion, different combinations of the inputs can achieve the same mean but with different population variability. With TuNR, we achieve low basal expression, over 1000-fold expression of a transgene product, and up to 7-fold induction of the endogenous gene NGFR. Importantly, for the same mean expression level, we are able to establish varying degrees of heterogeneity in expression within an isogenic population, thereby decoupling gene expression noise from its mean. TuNR is therefore a modular tool that can be used in mammalian cells to enable direct interrogation of the implications of cell-to-cell variability.


Gene Expression Regulation , Abscisic Acid/pharmacology , Cell Line , Gene Expression Regulation/drug effects , Humans , Trans-Activators/metabolism , Transgenes
11.
Cell ; 184(3): 561-565, 2021 02 04.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33503447

Our nationwide network of BME women faculty collectively argue that racial funding disparity by the National Institutes of Health (NIH) remains the most insidious barrier to success of Black faculty in our profession. We thus refocus attention on this critical barrier and suggest solutions on how it can be dismantled.


Biomedical Research/economics , Black or African American , Financial Management , Research Personnel/economics , Humans , National Institutes of Health (U.S.)/economics , Racial Groups , United States
12.
Front Fungal Biol ; 2: 642336, 2021.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37744115

Functional divergence of duplicate genes, or paralogs, is an important driver of novelty in evolution. In the model yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae, there are 547 paralog gene pairs that survive from an interspecies Whole Genome Hybridization (WGH) that occurred ~100MYA. In this work, we report that ~1/6th (110) of these WGH paralogs pairs (or ohnologs) are differentially expressed with a striking pattern upon Protein Kinase A (PKA) inhibition. One member of each pair in this group has low basal expression that increases upon PKA inhibition, while the other has moderate and unchanging expression. For these genes, expression of orthologs upon PKA inhibition in the non-WGH species Kluyveromyces lactis and for PKA-related stresses in other budding yeasts shows unchanging expression, suggesting that lack of responsiveness to PKA was likely the typical ancestral phenotype prior to duplication. Promoter sequence analysis across related budding yeast species further revealed that the subsequent emergence of PKA-dependence took different evolutionary routes. In some examples, regulation by PKA and differential expression appears to have arisen following the WGH, while in others, regulation by PKA appears to have arisen in one of the two parental lineages prior to the WGH. More broadly, our results illustrate the unique opportunities presented by a WGH event for generating functional divergence by bringing together two parental lineages with separately evolved regulation into one species. We propose that functional divergence of two ohnologs can be facilitated through such regulatory divergence.

13.
ACS Synth Biol ; 9(11): 2917-2926, 2020 11 20.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33166452

Mathematical models can aid the design of genetic circuits, but may yield inaccurate results if individual parts are not modeled at the appropriate resolution. To illustrate the importance of this concept, we study transcriptional cascades consisting of two inducible synthetic transcription factors connected in series. Despite the simplicity of this design, we find that accurate prediction of circuit behavior requires mapping the dose responses of each circuit component along the dimensions of both its expression level and its inducer concentration. Using this multidimensional characterization, we were able to computationally explore the behavior of 16 different circuit designs. We experimentally verified a subset of these predictions and found substantial agreement. This method of biological part characterization enables the use of models to identify (un)desired circuit behaviors prior to experimental implementation, thus shortening the design-build-test cycle for more complex circuits.


Gene Regulatory Networks/genetics , Genetic Engineering/methods , Models, Genetic , Models, Theoretical , Synthetic Biology/methods , Transcription, Genetic/genetics , Yeasts/genetics
14.
Cell Syst ; 11(4): 336-353.e24, 2020 10 21.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32898473

Gene expression is thought to be affected not only by the concentration of transcription factors (TFs) but also the dynamics of their nuclear translocation. Testing this hypothesis requires direct control of TF dynamics. Here, we engineer CLASP, an optogenetic tool for rapid and tunable translocation of a TF of interest. Using CLASP fused to Crz1, we observe that, for the same integrated concentration of nuclear TF over time, changing input dynamics changes target gene expression: pulsatile inputs yield higher expression than continuous inputs, or vice versa, depending on the target gene. Computational modeling reveals that a dose-response saturating at low TF input can yield higher gene expression for pulsatile versus continuous input, and that multi-state promoter activation can yield the opposite behavior. Our integrated tool development and modeling approach characterize promoter responses to Crz1 nuclear translocation dynamics, extracting quantitative features that may help explain the differential expression of target genes.


DNA-Binding Proteins/metabolism , Saccharomyces cerevisiae Proteins/metabolism , Transcription Factors/metabolism , Active Transport, Cell Nucleus , Cell Nucleus/metabolism , DNA-Binding Proteins/genetics , Gene Expression , Optogenetics/methods , Promoter Regions, Genetic/genetics , Protein Transport , Saccharomyces cerevisiae , Saccharomyces cerevisiae Proteins/genetics , Transcription Factors/genetics
15.
Science ; 368(6486): 78-84, 2020 04 03.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32241946

The design of modular protein logic for regulating protein function at the posttranscriptional level is a challenge for synthetic biology. Here, we describe the design of two-input AND, OR, NAND, NOR, XNOR, and NOT gates built from de novo-designed proteins. These gates regulate the association of arbitrary protein units ranging from split enzymes to transcriptional machinery in vitro, in yeast and in primary human T cells, where they control the expression of the TIM3 gene related to T cell exhaustion. Designed binding interaction cooperativity, confirmed by native mass spectrometry, makes the gates largely insensitive to stoichiometric imbalances in the inputs, and the modularity of the approach enables ready extension to three-input OR, AND, and disjunctive normal form gates. The modularity and cooperativity of the control elements, coupled with the ability to de novo design an essentially unlimited number of protein components, should enable the design of sophisticated posttranslational control logic over a wide range of biological functions.


Hepatitis A Virus Cellular Receptor 2/chemistry , Protein Engineering , Protein Interaction Maps , Protein Processing, Post-Translational , Hepatitis A Virus Cellular Receptor 2/genetics , Humans , Logic , Mass Spectrometry , Synthetic Biology , T-Lymphocytes/metabolism , Transcription, Genetic , Yeasts/metabolism
16.
PLoS One ; 15(3): e0230246, 2020.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32160258

Cells respond to changes in environmental conditions by activating signal transduction pathways and gene expression programs. Here we present a dataset to explore the relationship between environmental stresses, kinases, and global gene expression in yeast. We subjected 28 drug-sensitive kinase mutants to 10 environmental conditions in the presence of inhibitor and performed mRNA deep sequencing. With these data, we reconstructed canonical stress pathways and identified examples of crosstalk among pathways. The data also implicated numerous kinases in novel environment-specific roles. However, rather than regulating dedicated sets of target genes, individual kinases tuned the magnitude of induction of the environmental stress response (ESR)-a gene expression signature shared across the set of perturbations-in environment-specific ways. This suggests that the ESR integrates inputs from multiple sensory kinases to modulate gene expression and growth control. As an example, we provide experimental evidence that the high osmolarity glycerol pathway is an upstream negative regulator of protein kinase A, a known inhibitor of the ESR. These results elaborate the central axis of cellular stress response signaling.


Saccharomyces cerevisiae Proteins/genetics , Saccharomyces cerevisiae/genetics , Stress, Physiological/genetics , Cyclic AMP-Dependent Protein Kinases/metabolism , Gene Expression Regulation, Fungal/genetics , Mitogen-Activated Protein Kinases/metabolism , Phosphotransferases/genetics , Phosphotransferases/metabolism , RNA, Messenger/metabolism , Signal Transduction/physiology , Transcription Factors/metabolism
17.
Nature ; 579(7798): E8, 2020 03.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32094663

An amendment to this paper has been published and can be accessed via a link at the top of the paper.

18.
Bio Protoc ; 10(5): e3547, 2020 Mar 05.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33659521

The ability to rapidly assemble and prototype cellular circuits is vital for biological research and its applications in biotechnology and medicine. The Mammalian ToolKit (MTK) is a Golden Gate-based cloning toolkit for fast, reproducible and versatile assembly of large DNA vectors and their implementation in mammalian models. The MTK consists of a curated library of characterized, modular parts that can be assembled into transcriptional units and further weaved into complex circuits. These circuits are easily repurposed and introduced in mammalian cells by different methods.

19.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A ; 116(52): 26918-26924, 2019 Dec 26.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31822605

Differentiated cell types often retain their characteristics through many rounds of cell division. A simple example is found in Candida albicans, a member of the human microbiota and also the most prevalent fungal pathogen of humans; here, two distinct cell types (white and opaque) exist, and each one retains its specialized properties across many cell divisions. Switching between the two cell types is rare in standard laboratory medium (2% glucose) but can be increased by signals in the environment, for example, certain sugars. When these signals are removed, switching ceases and cells remain in their present state, which is faithfully passed on through many generations of daughter cells. Here, using an automated flow cytometry assay to monitor white-opaque switching over 96 different sugar concentrations, we observed a wide range of opaque-to-white switching that varied continuously across different sugar compositions of the medium. By also measuring white cell proliferation rates under each condition, we found that both opaque-to-white switching and selective white cell proliferation are required for entire populations to shift from opaque to white. Moreover, the switching frequency correlates with the preference of the resulting cell type for the growth medium; that is, the switching is adjusted to increase in environments that favor white cell proliferation. The widely adjustable, all-or-none nature of the switch, combined with the long-term heritability of each state, is distinct from conventional forms of gene regulation, and we propose that it represents a strategy used by C. albicans to efficiently colonize different niches of its human host.

20.
ACS Synth Biol ; 8(11): 2593-2606, 2019 11 15.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31686495

The ability to rapidly assemble and prototype cellular circuits is vital for biological research and its applications in biotechnology and medicine. Current methods for the assembly of mammalian DNA circuits are laborious, slow, and expensive. Here we present the Mammalian ToolKit (MTK), a Golden Gate-based cloning toolkit for fast, reproducible, and versatile assembly of large DNA vectors and their implementation in mammalian models. The MTK consists of a curated library of characterized, modular parts that can be assembled into transcriptional units and further weaved into complex circuits. We showcase the capabilities of the MTK by using it to generate single-integration landing pads, create and deliver libraries of protein variants and sgRNAs, and iterate through dCas9-based prototype circuits. As a biological proof of concept, we demonstrate how the MTK can speed the generation of noninfectious viral circuits to enable rapid testing of pharmacological inhibitors of emerging viruses that pose a major threat to human health.


Biotechnology/methods , Cell Engineering/methods , Cloning, Molecular/methods , Gene Library , Gene Regulatory Networks , 3T3 Cells , Animals , CRISPR-Associated Protein 9/genetics , DNA/genetics , Ebolavirus/genetics , Genetic Vectors , HEK293 Cells , Humans , Mice , Plasmids/genetics , Synthetic Biology/methods , Transfection
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