Math cuts trial and error in building biological circuits

Synthetic biologists have the tools to build complex, computer-like DNA circuits that sense or trigger activities in cells. And thanks to new research, they now have a way to test those circuits in advance.

Researchers developed models to predict the output of custom-built genetic circuits that, for example, scientists can prompt to start or stop the production of proteins.

“In the same way that we can predict how electronic circuits work before we build them by modeling them in computers, now we can do that with these gene circuits as well.”

The idea behind synthetic biological circuits seems simple. They are combinations of proteins and ligands that switch gene expression on or off in response to specific conditions in a cell. Scientists can use these circuits to engineer bacteria and other organisms to regulate cellular systems or perform functions they wouldn’t in nature.

The approach allows unprecedented precision in programming microorganisms, and experts expect the field to bring about a revolution in biological sensing and delivery of customized medical treatments such as probiotics to patients and to advance the controllable manufacture of useful chemicals by genetically modified bacteria.

The concern is that the ability to engineer new circuits, with hundreds of genetic parts available to combine in thousands of ways, has outstripped the ability to characterize them. And the same combination can lead to different outcomes depending on the cellular environment.

The new work is a step toward solving those problems by eliminating much of the trial and error, says Matthew Bennett, an associate professor of biochemistry and cell biology at Rice University.

‘Naïve’ but complex

The researchers initial modeling target is multi-input synthetic promoters, switches that require more than one condition to be met before they start or stop the production of a specific protein. For instance, they could design a promoter to sense the environment around the cell and trigger production of a particular protein only if it detects two chemicals.

“There are different ways of constructing multi-input promoters, the parts of DNA that turn a gene on and off…”

“One of the first problems in synthetic biology was just getting enough parts to assemble larger circuits,” Bennett says. “Now that we have the parts, and we’re faced with the task of being able to predict how these novel circuits are going to behave.

“There are different ways of constructing multi-input promoters, the parts of DNA that turn a gene on and off,” he says. “These constructs allow cells to sense multiple environmental conditions simultaneously to determine whether or not a gene should be turned on or off.”

Bennett says the team explored different ways of modeling systems to predict how they work. The models used information from the input/output relations of simple, stand-alone circuits, and then predict how they’ll work in combination.

The first “naïve” model used data from single-input systems that sense the presence of ligands that repress transcription by chimeric transcription factors. Combining data from several circuits allowed researchers to accurately predict the on-off responses in two-input circuits with two chimeras.

The researchers confirmed the model’s prediction by engineering bacteria with chimeric “AND” gates that required two ligands to be present to induce the production of a fluorescent protein. Changing the ligand levels changed the fluorescent output on a curve that closely matched the model’s prediction.

‘Informing’ the model

Bennett says a second, more sophisticated model predicts a circuit’s output over an entire landscape of input combinations. That required “informing” the model with a small set of data from experimental two-input systems, and more experiments to verify the accuracy of the model.

The lab also tested each model on multi-input hybrid promoters that included both activators (on switches) and repressors (off switches). The naïve model sometimes succumbed to crosstalk between signaling molecules, but the informed model continued to produce accurate predictions.

“This provides a way of designing and constructing large synthetic gene circuits more efficiently,” Bennett says. “In the same way that we can predict how electronic circuits work before we build them by modeling them in computers, now we can do that with these gene circuits as well.”

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Bennet says the naïve model will be useful for predicting the behavior of well-characterized single-input devices without additional lab work, and the informed model will help researchers design microbes for complex, constantly changing environments such as the gut microbiome or soil.

The research appears in the journal ACS Synthetic Biology. Additional coauthors are Rice and the University of Houston. The National Institutes of Health, the Robert A. Welch Foundation, and the National Science Foundation, and its Graduate Research Fellowship Program supported the research.

Source: Rice University