Engineering combinatorial and dynamic decoders using synthetic immediate-early genes

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Abstract

Many cell- and tissue-level functions are coordinated by intracellular signaling pathways that trigger the expression of context-specific target genes. Yet the input–output relationships that link pathways to the genes they activate are incompletely understood. Mapping the pathway-decoding logic of natural target genes could also provide a basis for engineering novel signal-decoding circuits. Here we report the construction of synthetic immediate-early genes (SynIEGs), target genes of Erk signaling that implement complex, user-defined regulation and can be monitored by using live-cell biosensors to track their transcription and translation. We demonstrate the power of this approach by confirming Erk duration-sensing by FOS, elucidating how the BTG2 gene is differentially regulated by external stimuli, and designing a synthetic immediate-early gene that selectively responds to the combination of growth factor and DNA damage stimuli. SynIEGs pave the way toward engineering molecular circuits that decode signaling dynamics and combinations across a broad range of cellular contexts.

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Ravindran, P. T., Wilson, M. Z., Jena, S. G., & Toettcher, J. E. (2020). Engineering combinatorial and dynamic decoders using synthetic immediate-early genes. Communications Biology, 3(1). https://doi.org/10.1038/s42003-020-01171-1

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