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1.
bioRxiv ; 2024 Feb 19.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38464222

ABSTRACT

Inducible protein switches are used throughout the biosciences to allow on-demand control of proteins in response to chemical or optical inputs. However, these inducers either cannot be controlled with precision in space and time or cannot be applied in optically dense settings, limiting their application in tissues and organisms. Here we introduce a protein module whose active state can be reversibly toggled with a small change in temperature, a stimulus that is both penetrant and dynamic. This protein, called Melt (Membrane localization through temperature), exists as a monomer in the cytoplasm at elevated temperatures but both oligomerizes and translocates to the plasma membrane when temperature is lowered. Using custom devices for rapid and high-throughput temperature control during live-cell microscopy, we find that the original Melt variant fully switches states between 28-32°C, and state changes can be observed within minutes of temperature changes. Melt was highly modular, permitting thermal control over diverse intracellular processes including signaling, proteolysis, and nuclear shuttling through straightforward end-to-end fusions with no further engineering. Melt was also highly tunable, giving rise to a library of Melt variants with switch point temperatures ranging from 30-40°C. The variants with higher switch points allowed control of molecular circuits between 37°C-41°C, a well-tolerated range for mammalian cells. Finally, Melt could thermally regulate important cell decisions over this range, including cytoskeletal rearrangement and apoptosis. Thus Melt represents a versatile thermogenetic module that provides straightforward, temperature-based, real-time control of mammalian cells with broad potential for biotechnology and biomedicine.

2.
Chembiochem ; 24(7): e202200802, 2023 04 03.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36734186

ABSTRACT

The emergence of drug-resistant pathogens necessitates the development of new countermeasures. In this regard, the introduction of probiotics to directly attack or competitively exclude pathogens presents a useful strategy. Application of this approach requires an understanding of how a probiotic and its target pathogen interact. A key means of probiotic-pathogen interaction involves the production of small molecules called natural products (NPs). Here, we report the use of whole-cell matrix-assisted laser desorption/ionization time-of-flight (MALDI-ToF) mass spectrometry to characterize NP production by candidate probiotics (mouse airway microbiome isolates) when co-cultured with the respiratory pathogen Burkholderia. We found that a Bacillus velezensis strain inhibits growth of and elicits NP production by Burkholderia thailandensis. Dereplication of known NPs detected in the metabolome of this B. velezensis strain suggests that a previously unannotated bioactive compound is involved. Thus, we present the use of whole-cell MALDI as a broadly applicable method for screening the NP composition of microbial co-cultures; this can be combined with other -omics methods to characterize probiotic-pathogen and other microbe-microbe interactions.


Subject(s)
Metabolomics , Mice , Animals , Spectrometry, Mass, Matrix-Assisted Laser Desorption-Ionization/methods
3.
Nat Commun ; 13(1): 4904, 2022 08 20.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35987925

ABSTRACT

DNA has emerged as a powerful substrate for programming information processing machines at the nanoscale. Among the DNA computing primitives used today, DNA strand displacement (DSD) is arguably the most popular, with DSD-based circuit applications ranging from disease diagnostics to molecular artificial neural networks. The outputs of DSD circuits are generally read using fluorescence spectroscopy. However, due to the spectral overlap of typical small-molecule fluorescent reporters, the number of unique outputs that can be detected in parallel is limited, requiring complex optical setups or spatial isolation of reactions to make output bandwidths scalable. Here, we present a multiplexable sequencing-free readout method that enables real-time, kinetic measurement of DSD circuit activity through highly parallel, direct detection of barcoded output strands using nanopore sensor array technology (Oxford Nanopore Technologies' MinION device). These results increase DSD output bandwidth by an order of magnitude over what is currently feasible with fluorescence spectroscopy.


Subject(s)
Nanopores , DNA , High-Throughput Nucleotide Sequencing/methods , Recombination, Genetic , Sequence Analysis, DNA/methods
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