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1.
Cell ; 187(11): 2785-2800.e16, 2024 May 23.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38657604

ABSTRACT

Natural cell death pathways such as apoptosis and pyroptosis play dual roles: they eliminate harmful cells and modulate the immune system by dampening or stimulating inflammation. Synthetic protein circuits capable of triggering specific death programs in target cells could similarly remove harmful cells while appropriately modulating immune responses. However, cells actively influence their death modes in response to natural signals, making it challenging to control death modes. Here, we introduce naturally inspired "synpoptosis" circuits that proteolytically regulate engineered executioner proteins and mammalian cell death. These circuits direct cell death modes, respond to combinations of protease inputs, and selectively eliminate target cells. Furthermore, synpoptosis circuits can be transmitted intercellularly, offering a foundation for engineering synthetic killer cells that induce desired death programs in target cells without self-destruction. Together, these results lay the groundwork for programmable control of mammalian cell death.


Subject(s)
Cell Death , Humans , Apoptosis , Caspases/metabolism , HEK293 Cells , Proteolysis , Pyroptosis/drug effects , Synthetic Biology/methods , Cells, Cultured
2.
Cell ; 185(6): 967-979.e12, 2022 03 17.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35235768

ABSTRACT

In multicellular organisms, cells actively sense and control their own population density. Synthetic mammalian quorum-sensing circuits could provide insight into principles of population control and extend cell therapies. However, a key challenge is reducing their inherent sensitivity to "cheater" mutations that evade control. Here, we repurposed the plant hormone auxin to enable orthogonal mammalian cell-cell communication and quorum sensing. We designed a paradoxical population control circuit, termed "Paradaux," in which auxin stimulates and inhibits net cell growth at different concentrations. This circuit limited population size over extended timescales of up to 42 days of continuous culture. By contrast, when operating in a non-paradoxical regime, population control became more susceptible to mutational escape. These results establish auxin as a versatile "private" communication system and demonstrate that paradoxical circuit architectures can provide robust population control.


Subject(s)
Cell Communication , Signal Transduction , Animals , Cell Count , Cell Engineering , Indoleacetic Acids , Mammals , Quorum Sensing , Synthetic Biology/methods
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