Emergent genetic oscillations in a synthetic microbial consortium

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Abstract

A challenge of synthetic biology is the creation of cooperative microbial systems that exhibit population-level behaviors. Such systems use cellular signaling mechanisms to regulate gene expression across multiple cell types. We describe the construction of a synthetic microbial consortium consisting of two distinct cell types - an "activator" strain and a "repressor" strain. These strains produced two orthogonal cell-signaling molecules that regulate gene expression within a synthetic circuit spanning both strains. The two strains generated emergent, population-level oscillations only when cultured together. Certain network topologies of the two-strain circuit were better at maintaining robust oscillations than others. The ability to program population-level dynamics through the genetic engineering of multiple cooperative strains points the way toward engineering complex synthetic tissues and organs with multiple cell types.

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Chen, Y., Kim, J. K., Hirning, A. J., Josić, K., & Bennett, M. R. (2015). Emergent genetic oscillations in a synthetic microbial consortium. Science, 349(6251), 986–989. https://doi.org/10.1126/science.aaa3794

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