Engineering of an enhanced synthetic Notch receptor by reducing ligand-independent activation

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Abstract

Notch signaling is highly conserved in most animals and plays critical roles during neurogenesis as well as embryonic development. Synthetic Notch-based systems, modeled from Notch receptors, have been developed to sense and respond to a specific extracellular signal. Recent advancement of synNotch has shown promise for future use in cellular engineering to treat cancers. However, synNotch from Morsut et al. (2016) has a high level of ligand-independent activation, which limits its application. Here we show that adding an intracellular hydrophobic sequence (QHGQLWF, named as RAM7) present in native Notch, significantly reduced ligand-independent activation. Our enhanced synthetic Notch receptor (esNotch) demonstrates up to a 14.6-fold reduction in ligand-independent activation, without affecting its antigen-induced activation efficiency. Our work improves a previously reported transmembrane receptor and provides a powerful tool to develop better transmembrane signaling transduction modules for further advancement of eukaryotic synthetic biology.

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Yang, Z. jie, Yu, Z. yan, Cai, Y. ming, Du, R. rong, & Cai, L. (2020). Engineering of an enhanced synthetic Notch receptor by reducing ligand-independent activation. Communications Biology, 3(1). https://doi.org/10.1038/s42003-020-0848-x

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