Light-inducible gene regulation with engineered zinc finger proteins

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Abstract

The coupling of light-inducible protein–protein interactions with gene regulation systems has enabled the control of gene expression with light. In particular, heterodimer protein pairs from plants can be used to engineer a gene regulation system in mammalian cells that is reversible, repeatable, tunable, controllable in a spatiotemporal manner, and targetable to any DNA sequence. This system, Light-Inducible Transcription using Engineered Zinc finger proteins (LITEZ), is based on the blue light-induced interaction of GIGANTEA and the LOV domain of FKF1 that drives the localization of a transcriptional activator to the DNA-binding site of a highly customizable engineered zinc finger protein. This chapter provides methods for modifying LITEZ to target new DNA sequences, engineering a programmable LED array to illuminate cell cultures, and using the modified LITEZ system to achieve spatiotemporal control of transgene expression in mammalian cells.

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Polstein, L. R., & Gersbach, C. A. (2014). Light-inducible gene regulation with engineered zinc finger proteins. Methods in Molecular Biology, 1148, 89–107. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-1-4939-0470-9_7

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