Next generation synthetic memory via intercepting recombinase function

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Abstract

Here we present a technology to facilitate synthetic memory in a living system via repurposing Transcriptional Programming (i.e., our decision-making technology) parts, to regulate (intercept) recombinase function post-translation. We show that interception synthetic memory can facilitate programmable loss-of-function via site-specific deletion, programmable gain-of-function by way of site-specific inversion, and synthetic memory operations with nested Boolean logical operations. We can expand interception synthetic memory capacity more than 5-fold for a single recombinase, with reconfiguration specificity for multiple sites in parallel. Interception synthetic memory is ~10-times faster than previous generations of recombinase-based memory. We posit that the faster recombination speed of our next-generation memory technology is due to the post-translational regulation of recombinase function. This iteration of synthetic memory is complementary to decision-making via Transcriptional Programming – thus can be used to develop intelligent synthetic biological systems for myriad applications.

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APA

Short, A. E., Kim, D., Milner, P. T., & Wilson, C. J. (2023). Next generation synthetic memory via intercepting recombinase function. Nature Communications, 14(1). https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-023-41043-w

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