Engineering and Rewiring of a Calcium-Dependent Signaling Pathway

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Abstract

An important feature of synthetic biological circuits is their response to physicochemical signals, which enables the external control of cellular processes. Calcium-dependent regulation is an attractive approach for achieving such control, as diverse stimuli induce calcium influx by activating membrane channel receptors. Most calcium-dependent gene circuits use the endogenous nuclear factor of activated T-cells (NFAT) signaling pathway. Here, we employed engineered NFAT transcription factors to induce the potent and robust activation of exogenous gene expression in HEK293T cells. Furthermore, we designed a calcium-dependent transcription factor that does not interfere with NFAT-regulated promoters and potently activates transcription in several mammalian cell types. Additionally, we demonstrate that coupling the circuit to a calcium-selective ion channel resulted in capsaicin- and temperature-controlled gene expression. This engineered calcium-dependent signaling pathway enables tightly controlled regulation of gene expression through different stimuli in mammalian cells and is versatile, adaptable, and useful for a wide range of therapeutic and diagnostic applications.

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Meško, M., Lebar, T., Dekleva, P., Jerala, R., & Benčina, M. (2020). Engineering and Rewiring of a Calcium-Dependent Signaling Pathway. ACS Synthetic Biology, 9(8), 2055–2065. https://doi.org/10.1021/acssynbio.0c00133

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