Rapidly Characterizing the Fast Dynamics of RNA Genetic Circuitry with Cell-Free Transcription–Translation (TX-TL) Systems

Melissa K. Takahashi(Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory), James Chappell(Cornell University), Clarmyra A. Hayes(California Institute of Technology), Zachary Z. Sun(California Institute of Technology), Jongmin Kim(California Institute of Technology), Vipul Singhal(Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory), Kevin J. Spring(Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory), Shaima Al‐Khabouri(Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory), Christopher P. Fall(Georgetown University), Vincent Noireaux(University of Minnesota), Richard M. Murray(California Institute of Technology), Julius B. Lucks(Cornell University)
ACS Synthetic Biology
March 12, 2014
Cited by 181Open Access
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Abstract

RNA regulators are emerging as powerful tools to engineer synthetic genetic networks or rewire existing ones. A potential strength of RNA networks is that they may be able to propagate signals on time scales that are set by the fast degradation rates of RNAs. However, a current bottleneck to verifying this potential is the slow design-build-test cycle of evaluating these networks in vivo. Here, we adapt an Escherichia coli-based cell-free transcription-translation (TX-TL) system for rapidly prototyping RNA networks. We used this system to measure the response time of an RNA transcription cascade to be approximately five minutes per step of the cascade. We also show that this response time can be adjusted with temperature and regulator threshold tuning. Finally, we use TX-TL to prototype a new RNA network, an RNA single input module, and show that this network temporally stages the expression of two genes in vivo.


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