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research article

Phosphoregulated orthogonal signal transduction in mammalian cells

Scheller, Leo  
•
Schmollack, Marc
•
Bertschi, Adrian
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June 18, 2020
Nature Communications

Orthogonal tools for controlling protein function by post-translational modifications open up new possibilities for protein circuit engineering in synthetic biology. Phosphoregulation is a key mechanism of signal processing in all kingdoms of life, but tools to control the involved processes are very limited. Here, we repurpose components of bacterial two-component systems (TCSs) for chemically induced phosphotransfer in mammalian cells. TCSs are the most abundant multi-component signal-processing units in bacteria, but are not found in the animal kingdom. The presented phosphoregulated orthogonal signal transduction (POST) system uses induced nanobody dimerization to regulate the trans-autophosphorylation activity of engineered histidine kinases. Engineered response regulators use the phosphohistidine residue as a substrate to autophosphorylate an aspartate residue, inducing their own homodimerization. We verify this approach by demonstrating control of gene expression with engineered, dimerization-dependent transcription factors and propose a phosphoregulated relay system of protein dimerization as a basic building block for next-generation protein circuits. Phosphoregulation is a key mechanism of signal processing. Here the authors build a phosphoregulated relay system in mammalian cells for orthogonal signal transduction.

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Type
research article
DOI
10.1038/s41467-020-16895-1
Web of Science ID

WOS:000544028400001

Author(s)
Scheller, Leo  
Schmollack, Marc
Bertschi, Adrian
Mansouri, Maysam
Saxena, Pratik
Fussenegger, Martin
Date Issued

2020-06-18

Publisher

Nature Research

Published in
Nature Communications
Volume

11

Issue

1

Article Number

3085

Subjects

Multidisciplinary Sciences

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Science & Technology - Other Topics

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sensor kinase dcus

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escherichia-coli

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histidine kinase

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2-component

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system

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mechanism

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ultrasensitivity

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phosphorylation

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specificity

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robustness

Note

This article is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License.

Editorial or Peer reviewed

REVIEWED

Written at

EPFL

EPFL units
IBI-STI  
Available on Infoscience
July 16, 2020
Use this identifier to reference this record
https://infoscience.epfl.ch/handle/20.500.14299/170156
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