Light-controlled gene switches in mammalian cells

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Abstract

Remote control of cells is a desirable feature in synthetic biology. We established a light-switchable interfering peptide (iPEP) which controls gene expression by modulating the activity of a transcription factor. For photo-switching, the iPEP is cross-linked with a cis-trans isomerizable cross-linker in such a way that the light-activated cis form enables inhibitor folding rendering it active, whereas the dark-adapted trans form forces the inhibitor into an inactive form. Switching can be repeated in both directions. The iPEP acts as dominant-negative inhibitor targeting c-Jun and c-Fos of the transcription factor activator protein-1 (AP-1). Light-activated peptides exhibited much stronger inhibition of AP-1:DNA complexes and interference with gene transcription than their nonactivated counter parts. In this chapter, we provide protocols for cross-linking, peptide purification, observation of structural changes upon photo-switching, DNA binding analyses as well as gene expression studies in mammalian cells. © 2012 Springer Science+Business Media, LLC.

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Zhang, F., Müller, K. M., Woolley, G. A., & Arndt, K. M. (2012). Light-controlled gene switches in mammalian cells. Methods in Molecular Biology, 813, 195–210. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-1-61779-412-4_12

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