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1.
NPJ Syst Biol Appl ; 10(1): 24, 2024 Mar 06.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38448436

RESUMO

Genome-scale metabolic models are powerful tools for understanding cellular physiology. Flux balance analysis (FBA), in particular, is an optimization-based approach widely employed for predicting metabolic phenotypes. In model microbes such as Escherichia coli, FBA has been successful at predicting essential genes, i.e. those genes that impair survival when deleted. A central assumption in this approach is that both wild type and deletion strains optimize the same fitness objective. Although the optimality assumption may hold for the wild type metabolic network, deletion strains are not subject to the same evolutionary pressures and knock-out mutants may steer their metabolism to meet other objectives for survival. Here, we present FlowGAT, a hybrid FBA-machine learning strategy for predicting essentiality directly from wild type metabolic phenotypes. The approach is based on graph-structured representation of metabolic fluxes predicted by FBA, where nodes correspond to enzymatic reactions and edges quantify the propagation of metabolite mass flow between a reaction and its neighbours. We integrate this information into a graph neural network that can be trained on knock-out fitness assay data. Comparisons across different model architectures reveal that FlowGAT predictions for E. coli are close to those of FBA for several growth conditions. This suggests that essentiality of enzymatic genes can be predicted by exploiting the inherent network structure of metabolism. Our approach demonstrates the benefits of combining the mechanistic insights afforded by genome-scale models with the ability of deep learning to infer patterns from complex datasets.


Assuntos
Escherichia coli , Aprendizado de Máquina , Escherichia coli/genética , Redes Neurais de Computação , Fenótipo
2.
Methods Mol Biol ; 2760: 345-369, 2024.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38468098

RESUMO

The identification of essential genes is a key challenge in systems and synthetic biology, particularly for engineering metabolic pathways that convert feedstocks into valuable products. Assessment of gene essentiality at a genome scale requires large and costly growth assays of knockout strains. Here we describe a strategy to predict the essentiality of metabolic genes using binary classification algorithms. The approach combines elements from genome-scale metabolic models, directed graphs, and machine learning into a predictive model that can be trained on small knockout data. We demonstrate the efficacy of this approach using the most complete metabolic model of Escherichia coli and various machine learning algorithms for binary classification.


Assuntos
Algoritmos , Aprendizado de Máquina , Escherichia coli/genética , Escherichia coli/metabolismo , Genes Essenciais , Redes e Vias Metabólicas/genética
3.
Biochem Soc Trans ; 51(5): 1871-1879, 2023 10 31.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37656433

RESUMO

Dynamic pathway engineering aims to build metabolic production systems embedded with intracellular control mechanisms for improved performance. These control systems enable host cells to self-regulate the temporal activity of a production pathway in response to perturbations, using a combination of biosensors and feedback circuits for controlling expression of heterologous enzymes. Pathway design, however, requires assembling together multiple biological parts into suitable circuit architectures, as well as careful calibration of the function of each component. This results in a large design space that is costly to navigate through experimentation alone. Methods from artificial intelligence (AI) and machine learning are gaining increasing attention as tools to accelerate the design cycle, owing to their ability to identify hidden patterns in data and rapidly screen through large collections of designs. In this review, we discuss recent developments in the application of machine learning methods to the design of dynamic pathways and their components. We cover recent successes and offer perspectives for future developments in the field. The integration of AI into metabolic engineering pipelines offers great opportunities to streamline design and discover control systems for improved production of high-value chemicals.


Assuntos
Inteligência Artificial , Técnicas Biossensoriais , Aprendizado de Máquina , Engenharia Metabólica/métodos
4.
ACS Synth Biol ; 12(7): 2073-2082, 2023 07 21.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37339382

RESUMO

Recent advances in synthetic biology have enabled the construction of molecular circuits that operate across multiple scales of cellular organization, such as gene regulation, signaling pathways, and cellular metabolism. Computational optimization can effectively aid the design process, but current methods are generally unsuited for systems with multiple temporal or concentration scales, as these are slow to simulate due to their numerical stiffness. Here, we present a machine learning method for the efficient optimization of biological circuits across scales. The method relies on Bayesian optimization, a technique commonly used to fine-tune deep neural networks, to learn the shape of a performance landscape and iteratively navigate the design space toward an optimal circuit. This strategy allows the joint optimization of both circuit architecture and parameters, and provides a feasible approach to solve a highly nonconvex optimization problem in a mixed-integer input space. We illustrate the applicability of the method on several gene circuits for controlling biosynthetic pathways with strong nonlinearities, multiple interacting scales, and using various performance objectives. The method efficiently handles large multiscale problems and enables parametric sweeps to assess circuit robustness to perturbations, serving as an efficient in silico screening method prior to experimental implementation.


Assuntos
Regulação da Expressão Gênica , Redes Reguladoras de Genes , Teorema de Bayes , Redes Reguladoras de Genes/genética , Transdução de Sinais , Redes Neurais de Computação
5.
Nat Commun ; 14(1): 3445, 2023 06 10.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37301862

RESUMO

Cellular senescence is a stress response involved in ageing and diverse disease processes including cancer, type-2 diabetes, osteoarthritis and viral infection. Despite growing interest in targeted elimination of senescent cells, only few senolytics are known due to the lack of well-characterised molecular targets. Here, we report the discovery of three senolytics using cost-effective machine learning algorithms trained solely on published data. We computationally screened various chemical libraries and validated the senolytic action of ginkgetin, periplocin and oleandrin in human cell lines under various modalities of senescence. The compounds have potency comparable to known senolytics, and we show that oleandrin has improved potency over its target as compared to best-in-class alternatives. Our approach led to several hundred-fold reduction in drug screening costs and demonstrates that artificial intelligence can take maximum advantage of small and heterogeneous drug screening data, paving the way for new open science approaches to early-stage drug discovery.


Assuntos
Inteligência Artificial , Senoterapia , Humanos , Envelhecimento/fisiologia , Senescência Celular , Aprendizado de Máquina
7.
Curr Opin Biotechnol ; 81: 102941, 2023 06.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37087839

RESUMO

Advances in high-throughput DNA synthesis and sequencing have fuelled the use of massively parallel reporter assays for strain characterization. These experiments produce large datasets that map DNA sequences to protein expression levels, and have sparked increased interest in data-driven methods for sequence-to-expression modeling. Here, we highlight progress in deep learning models of protein expression and their potential for optimizing strains engineered to produce recombinant proteins. We discuss recent works that built highly accurate models as well as the challenges that hinder wider adoption by end users. There is a need to better align this technology with the requirements and capabilities encountered in strain engineering, particularly the cost of data acquisition and the need for interpretable models that generalize beyond the training data. Overcoming these barriers will help to incentivize academic and industrial laboratories to tap into a new era of data-centric strain engineering.


Assuntos
Bioengenharia , Aprendizado Profundo , Proteínas , Proteínas Recombinantes
8.
ACS Synth Biol ; 12(3): 709-721, 2023 03 17.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36802585

RESUMO

The discovery of clustered, regularly interspaced, short palindromic repeats (CRISPR) and the Cas9 RNA-guided nuclease provides unprecedented opportunities to selectively kill specific populations or species of bacteria. However, the use of CRISPR-Cas9 to clear bacterial infections in vivo is hampered by the inefficient delivery of cas9 genetic constructs into bacterial cells. Here, we use a broad-host-range P1-derived phagemid to deliver the CRISPR-Cas9 chromosomal-targeting system into Escherichia coli and the dysentery-causing Shigella flexneri to achieve DNA sequence-specific killing of targeted bacterial cells. We show that genetic modification of the helper P1 phage DNA packaging site (pac) significantly enhances the purity of packaged phagemid and improves the Cas9-mediated killing of S. flexneri cells. We further demonstrate that P1 phage particles can deliver chromosomal-targeting cas9 phagemids into S. flexneri in vivo using a zebrafish larvae infection model, where they significantly reduce the bacterial load and promote host survival. Our study highlights the potential of combining P1 bacteriophage-based delivery with the CRISPR chromosomal-targeting system to achieve DNA sequence-specific cell lethality and efficient clearance of bacterial infection.


Assuntos
Anti-Infecciosos , Sistemas CRISPR-Cas , Sistemas CRISPR-Cas/genética , Edição de Genes , Bacteriófago P1/genética , Peixe-Zebra/genética , Shigella flexneri/genética , Animais
9.
Nat Commun ; 13(1): 7755, 2022 12 15.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36517468

RESUMO

Synthetic biology often involves engineering microbial strains to express high-value proteins. Thanks to progress in rapid DNA synthesis and sequencing, deep learning has emerged as a promising approach to build sequence-to-expression models for strain optimization. But such models need large and costly training data that create steep entry barriers for many laboratories. Here we study the relation between accuracy and data efficiency in an atlas of machine learning models trained on datasets of varied size and sequence diversity. We show that deep learning can achieve good prediction accuracy with much smaller datasets than previously thought. We demonstrate that controlled sequence diversity leads to substantial gains in data efficiency and employed Explainable AI to show that convolutional neural networks can finely discriminate between input DNA sequences. Our results provide guidelines for designing genotype-phenotype screens that balance cost and quality of training data, thus helping promote the wider adoption of deep learning in the biotechnology sector.


Assuntos
Aprendizado Profundo , Redes Neurais de Computação , Aprendizado de Máquina , Proteínas
10.
Nat Commun ; 13(1): 4670, 2022 08 09.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35945220

RESUMO

Characterising associations between the methylome, proteome and phenome may provide insight into biological pathways governing brain health. Here, we report an integrated DNA methylation and phenotypic study of the circulating proteome in relation to brain health. Methylome-wide association studies of 4058 plasma proteins are performed (N = 774), identifying 2928 CpG-protein associations after adjustment for multiple testing. These are independent of known genetic protein quantitative trait loci (pQTLs) and common lifestyle effects. Phenome-wide association studies of each protein are then performed in relation to 15 neurological traits (N = 1,065), identifying 405 associations between the levels of 191 proteins and cognitive scores, brain imaging measures or APOE e4 status. We uncover 35 previously unreported DNA methylation signatures for 17 protein markers of brain health. The epigenetic and proteomic markers we identify are pertinent to understanding and stratifying brain health.


Assuntos
Estudo de Associação Genômica Ampla , Proteoma , Biomarcadores/metabolismo , Encéfalo/metabolismo , Ilhas de CpG/genética , Metilação de DNA/genética , Epigenoma , Proteoma/genética , Proteoma/metabolismo , Proteômica
11.
J R Soc Interface ; 19(188): 20210762, 2022 03.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35259958

RESUMO

A key goal in synthetic biology is the construction of molecular circuits that robustly adapt to perturbations. Although many natural systems display perfect adaptation, whereby stationary molecular concentrations are insensitive to perturbations, its de novo engineering has proven elusive. The discovery of the antithetic control motif was a significant step towards a universal mechanism for engineering perfect adaptation. Antithetic control provides perfect adaptation in a wide range of systems, but it can lead to oscillatory dynamics due to loss of stability; moreover, it can lose perfect adaptation in fast growing cultures. Here, we introduce an extended antithetic control motif that resolves these limitations. We show that molecular buffering, a widely conserved mechanism for homeostatic control in Nature, stabilizes oscillations and allows for near-perfect adaptation during rapid growth. We study multiple buffering topologies and compare their performance in terms of their stability and adaptation properties. We illustrate the benefits of our proposed strategy in exemplar models for biofuel production and growth rate control in bacterial cultures. Our results provide an improved circuit for robust control of biomolecular systems.


Assuntos
Modelos Biológicos , Biologia Sintética , Aclimatação , Adaptação Fisiológica , Homeostase
12.
ACS Synth Biol ; 11(1): 228-240, 2022 01 21.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34968029

RESUMO

Recent progress in synthetic biology allows the construction of dynamic control circuits for metabolic engineering. This technology promises to overcome many challenges encountered in traditional pathway engineering, thanks to its ability to self-regulate gene expression in response to bioreactor perturbations. The central components in these control circuits are metabolite biosensors that read out pathway signals and actuate enzyme expression. However, the construction of metabolite biosensors is a major bottleneck for strain design, and a key challenge is to understand the relation between biosensor dose-response curves and pathway performance. Here we employ multiobjective optimization to quantify performance trade-offs that arise in the design of metabolite biosensors. Our approach reveals strategies for tuning dose-response curves along an optimal trade-off between production flux and the cost of an increased expression burden on the host. We explore properties of control architectures built in the literature and identify their advantages and caveats in terms of performance and robustness to growth conditions and leaky promoters. We demonstrate the optimality of a control circuit for glucaric acid production in Escherichia coli, which has been shown to increase the titer by 2.5-fold as compared to static designs. Our results lay the groundwork for the automated design of control circuits for pathway engineering, with applications in the food, energy, and pharmaceutical sectors.


Assuntos
Técnicas Biossensoriais , Engenharia Metabólica , Técnicas Biossensoriais/métodos , Escherichia coli/genética , Escherichia coli/metabolismo , Engenharia Metabólica/métodos , Regiões Promotoras Genéticas , Biologia Sintética/métodos
13.
Semin Cancer Biol ; 86(Pt 3): 706-731, 2022 11.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34062265

RESUMO

Microbial polysaccharides (MPs) offer immense diversity in structural and functional properties. They are extensively used in advance biomedical science owing to their superior biodegradability, hemocompatibility, and capability to imitate the natural extracellular matrix microenvironment. Ease in tailoring, inherent bio-activity, distinct mucoadhesiveness, ability to absorb hydrophobic drugs, and plentiful availability of MPs make them prolific green biomaterials to overcome the significant constraints of cancer chemotherapeutics. Many studies have demonstrated their application to obstruct tumor development and extend survival through immune activation, apoptosis induction, and cell cycle arrest by MPs. Synoptic investigations of MPs are compulsory to decode applied basics in recent inclinations towards cancer regimens. The current review focuses on the anticancer properties of commercially available and newly explored MPs, and outlines their direct and indirect mode of action. The review also highlights cutting-edge MPs-based drug delivery systems to augment the specificity and efficiency of available chemotherapeutics, as well as their emerging role in theranostics.


Assuntos
Materiais Biocompatíveis , Neoplasias , Humanos , Materiais Biocompatíveis/uso terapêutico , Materiais Biocompatíveis/química , Polissacarídeos/uso terapêutico , Polissacarídeos/química , Polissacarídeos/farmacologia , Sistemas de Liberação de Medicamentos , Neoplasias/diagnóstico , Neoplasias/tratamento farmacológico , Microambiente Tumoral
14.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A ; 118(17)2021 04 27.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33883278

RESUMO

Cancer cells can survive chemotherapy-induced stress, but how they recover from it is not known. Using a temporal multiomics approach, we delineate the global mechanisms of proteotoxic stress resolution in multiple myeloma cells recovering from proteasome inhibition. Our observations define layered and protracted programs for stress resolution that encompass extensive changes across the transcriptome, proteome, and metabolome. Cellular recovery from proteasome inhibition involved protracted and dynamic changes of glucose and lipid metabolism and suppression of mitochondrial function. We demonstrate that recovering cells are more vulnerable to specific insults than acutely stressed cells and identify the general control nonderepressable 2 (GCN2)-driven cellular response to amino acid scarcity as a key recovery-associated vulnerability. Using a transcriptome analysis pipeline, we further show that GCN2 is also a stress-independent bona fide target in transcriptional signature-defined subsets of solid cancers that share molecular characteristics. Thus, identifying cellular trade-offs tied to the resolution of chemotherapy-induced stress in tumor cells may reveal new therapeutic targets and routes for cancer therapy optimization.


Assuntos
Neoplasias/tratamento farmacológico , Estresse Fisiológico/efeitos dos fármacos , Antineoplásicos/farmacologia , Autofagia/fisiologia , Linhagem Celular Tumoral , Humanos , Metaboloma/genética , Mitocôndrias/metabolismo , Mieloma Múltiplo/metabolismo , Neoplasias/metabolismo , Neoplasias/fisiopatologia , Inibidores de Proteassoma/farmacologia , Proteólise , Proteoma/genética , Análise de Sistemas , Transcriptoma/genética
15.
Methods Mol Biol ; 2229: 267-291, 2021.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33405227

RESUMO

Heterologous gene expression draws resources from host cells. These resources include vital components to sustain growth and replication, and the resulting cellular burden is a widely recognized bottleneck in the design of robust circuits. In this tutorial we discuss the use of computational models that integrate gene circuits and the physiology of host cells. Through various use cases, we illustrate the power of host-circuit models to predict the impact of design parameters on both burden and circuit functionality. Our approach relies on a new generation of computational models for microbial growth that can flexibly accommodate resource bottlenecks encountered in gene circuit design. Adoption of this modeling paradigm can facilitate fast and robust design cycles in synthetic biology.


Assuntos
Bactérias/genética , Redes Reguladoras de Genes , Biologia de Sistemas/métodos , Fenômenos Fisiológicos Bacterianos , Proteínas de Bactérias/genética , Expressão Gênica , Genes Sintéticos , Modelos Biológicos , Biologia Sintética
16.
Biophys J ; 119(5): 1002-1014, 2020 09 01.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32814062

RESUMO

Transcriptional bursting is a major source of noise in gene expression. The telegraph model of gene expression, whereby transcription switches between on and off states, is the dominant model for bursting. Recently, it was shown that the telegraph model cannot explain a number of experimental observations from perturbation data. Here, we study an alternative model that is consistent with the data and which explicitly describes RNA polymerase recruitment and polymerase pause release, two steps necessary for messenger RNA (mRNA) production. We derive the exact steady-state distribution of mRNA numbers and an approximate steady-state distribution of protein numbers, which are given by generalized hypergeometric functions. The theory is used to calculate the relative sensitivity of the coefficient of variation of mRNA fluctuations for thousands of genes in mouse fibroblasts. This indicates that the size of fluctuations is mostly sensitive to the rate of burst initiation and the mRNA degradation rate. Furthermore, we show that 1) the time-dependent distribution of mRNA numbers is accurately approximated by a modified telegraph model with a Michaelis-Menten like dependence of the effective transcription rate on RNA polymerase abundance, and 2) the model predicts that if the polymerase recruitment rate is comparable or less than the pause release rate, then upon gene replication, the mean number of RNA per cell remains approximately constant. This gene dosage compensation property has been experimentally observed and cannot be explained by the telegraph model with constant rates.


Assuntos
Modelos Genéticos , Estabilidade de RNA , Animais , Expressão Gênica , Camundongos , RNA Mensageiro/genética , Processos Estocásticos , Transcrição Gênica
17.
mBio ; 11(2)2020 03 17.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32184249

RESUMO

Microbes adapt their metabolism to take advantage of nutrients in their environment. Such adaptations control specific metabolic pathways to match energetic demands with nutrient availability. Upon depletion of nutrients, rapid pathway recovery is key to release cellular resources required for survival under the new nutritional conditions. Yet, little is known about the regulatory strategies that microbes employ to accelerate pathway recovery in response to nutrient depletion. Using the fatty acid catabolic pathway in Escherichia coli, here, we show that fast recovery can be achieved by rapid release of a transcriptional regulator from a metabolite-sequestered complex. With a combination of mathematical modeling and experiments, we show that recovery dynamics depend critically on the rate of metabolite consumption and the exposure time to nutrients. We constructed strains with rewired transcriptional regulatory architectures that highlight the metabolic benefits of negative autoregulation over constitutive and positive autoregulation. Our results have wide-ranging implications for our understanding of metabolic adaptations, as well as for guiding the design of gene circuitry for synthetic biology and metabolic engineering.IMPORTANCE Rapid metabolic recovery during nutrient shift is critical to microbial survival, cell fitness, and competition among microbiota, yet little is known about the regulatory mechanisms of rapid metabolic recovery. This work demonstrates a previously unknown mechanism where rapid release of a transcriptional regulator from a metabolite-sequestered complex enables fast recovery to nutrient depletion. The work identified key regulatory architectures and parameters that control the speed of recovery, with wide-ranging implications for the understanding of metabolic adaptations as well as synthetic biology and metabolic engineering.


Assuntos
Escherichia coli/genética , Escherichia coli/metabolismo , Ácidos Graxos/metabolismo , Redes e Vias Metabólicas/genética , Adaptação Fisiológica , Cinética , Engenharia Metabólica , Modelos Teóricos , Nutrientes/metabolismo
18.
Front Bioeng Biotechnol ; 8: 591049, 2020.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33569373

RESUMO

Metabolism plays a central role in cell physiology because it provides the molecular machinery for growth. At the genome-scale, metabolism is made up of thousands of reactions interacting with one another. Untangling this complexity is key to understand how cells respond to genetic, environmental, or therapeutic perturbations. Here we discuss the roles of two complementary strategies for the analysis of genome-scale metabolic models: Flux Balance Analysis (FBA) and network science. While FBA estimates metabolic flux on the basis of an optimization principle, network approaches reveal emergent properties of the global metabolic connectivity. We highlight how the integration of both approaches promises to deliver insights on the structure and function of metabolic systems with wide-ranging implications in discovery science, precision medicine and industrial biotechnology.

19.
Front Cell Dev Biol ; 8: 614832, 2020.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33415109

RESUMO

Metabolic heterogeneity is widely recognized as the next challenge in our understanding of non-genetic variation. A growing body of evidence suggests that metabolic heterogeneity may result from the inherent stochasticity of intracellular events. However, metabolism has been traditionally viewed as a purely deterministic process, on the basis that highly abundant metabolites tend to filter out stochastic phenomena. Here we bridge this gap with a general method for prediction of metabolite distributions across single cells. By exploiting the separation of time scales between enzyme expression and enzyme kinetics, our method produces estimates for metabolite distributions without the lengthy stochastic simulations that would be typically required for large metabolic models. The metabolite distributions take the form of Gaussian mixture models that are directly computable from single-cell expression data and standard deterministic models for metabolic pathways. The proposed mixture models provide a systematic method to predict the impact of biochemical parameters on metabolite distributions. Our method lays the groundwork for identifying the molecular processes that shape metabolic heterogeneity and its functional implications in disease.

20.
Nat Commun ; 10(1): 5250, 2019 11 20.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31748511

RESUMO

Synthetic biology uses living cells as the substrate for performing human-defined computations. Many current implementations of cellular computing are based on the "genetic circuit" metaphor, an approximation of the operation of silicon-based computers. Although this conceptual mapping has been relatively successful, we argue that it fundamentally limits the types of computation that may be engineered inside the cell, and fails to exploit the rich and diverse functionality available in natural living systems. We propose the notion of "cellular supremacy" to focus attention on domains in which biocomputing might offer superior performance over traditional computers. We consider potential pathways toward cellular supremacy, and suggest application areas in which it may be found.


Assuntos
Computadores Moleculares , Computadores , Biologia Sintética , Células
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