Engineering a genomically recoded organism with one stop codon

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Abstract

The genetic code is conserved across all domains of life, yet exceptions have revealed variations in codon assignments and associated translation factors1, 2–3. Inspired by this natural malleability, synthetic approaches have demonstrated whole-genome replacement of synonymous codons to construct genomically recoded organisms (GROs)4,5 with alternative genetic codes. However, no efforts have fully leveraged translation factor plasticity and codon degeneracy to compress translation function to a single codon and assess the possibility of a non-degenerate code. Here we describe construction and characterization of Ochre, a GRO that fully compresses a translational function into a single codon. We replaced 1,195 TGA stop codons with the synonymous TAA in ∆TAG Escherichia coli C321.∆A4. We then engineered release factor 2 (RF2) and tRNATrp to mitigate native UGA recognition, translationally isolating four codons for non-degenerate functions. Ochre thus utilizes UAA as the sole stop codon, with UGG encoding tryptophan and UAG and UGA reassigned for multi-site incorporation of two distinct non-standard amino acids into single proteins with more than 99% accuracy. Ochre fully compresses degenerate stop codons into a single codon and represents an important step toward a 64-codon non-degenerate code that will enable precise production of multi-functional synthetic proteins with unnatural encoded chemistries and broad utility in biotechnology and biotherapeutics.

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Grome, M. W., Nguyen, M. T. A., Moonan, D. W., Mohler, K., Gurara, K., Wang, S., … Isaacs, F. J. (2025). Engineering a genomically recoded organism with one stop codon. Nature, 639(8054), 512–521. https://doi.org/10.1038/s41586-024-08501-x

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