Cardinale S, Cambray G
Department of Bioengineering, University of California-Berkeley, Berkeley, CA, 94720, USA.
Present Address: Technical University of Denmark, Novo Nordisk Foundation Center for Biosustainability, Building 220, 2800, Kgs. Lyngby, DK, Denmark.
BMC Syst Biol. 2017 Nov 23;11(1):112. doi: 10.1186/s12918-017-0494-1.
The pursuit of standardization and reliability in synthetic biology has achieved, in recent years, a number of advances in the design of more predictable genetic parts for biological circuits. However, even with the development of high-throughput screening methods and whole-cell models, it is still not possible to predict reliably how a synthetic genetic construct interacts with all cellular endogenous systems. This study presents a genome-wide analysis of how the expression of synthetic genes is affected by systematic perturbations of cellular functions. We found that most perturbations modulate expression indirectly through an effect on cell size, putting forward the existence of a generic Size-Expression interaction in the model prokaryote Escherichia coli.
The Size-Expression interaction was quantified by inserting a dual fluorescent reporter gene construct into each of the 3822 single-gene deletion strains comprised in the KEIO collection. Cellular size was measured for single cells via flow cytometry. Regression analyses were used to discriminate between expression-specific and gene-specific effects. Functions of the deleted genes broadly mapped onto three systems with distinct primary influence on the Size-Expression map. Perturbations in the Division and Biosynthesis (DB) system led to a large-cell and high-expression phenotype. In contrast, disruptions of the Membrane and Motility (MM) system caused small-cell and low-expression phenotypes. The Energy, Protein synthesis and Ribosome (EPR) system was predominantly associated with smaller cells and positive feedback on ribosome function.
Feedback between cell growth and gene expression is widespread across cell systems. Even though most gene disruptions proximally affect one component of the Size-Expression interaction, the effect therefore ultimately propagates to both. More specifically, we describe the dual impact of growth on cell size and gene expression through cell division and ribosomal content. Finally, we elucidate aspects of the tight control between swarming, gene expression and cell growth. This work provides foundations for a systematic understanding of feedbacks between genetic and physiological systems.
近年来,合成生物学对标准化和可靠性的追求在设计更具可预测性的生物电路基因部件方面取得了诸多进展。然而,即便高通量筛选方法和全细胞模型有所发展,仍无法可靠预测合成基因构建体如何与所有细胞内源性系统相互作用。本研究对合成基因的表达如何受到细胞功能系统性扰动的影响进行了全基因组分析。我们发现,大多数扰动通过对细胞大小的影响间接调节表达,这表明在模式原核生物大肠杆菌中存在一种普遍的大小-表达相互作用。
通过将双荧光报告基因构建体插入KEIO文库中的3822个单基因缺失菌株,对大小-表达相互作用进行了量化。通过流式细胞术测量单细胞的细胞大小。使用回归分析来区分表达特异性和基因特异性效应。缺失基因的功能大致映射到对大小-表达图谱有不同主要影响的三个系统。分裂与生物合成(DB)系统的扰动导致大细胞和高表达表型。相反,膜与运动(MM)系统的破坏导致小细胞和低表达表型。能量、蛋白质合成与核糖体(EPR)系统主要与较小的细胞以及对核糖体功能的正反馈相关。
细胞生长与基因表达之间的反馈在细胞系统中广泛存在。尽管大多数基因破坏在近端影响大小-表达相互作用的一个组成部分,但其影响最终会传播到两者。更具体地说,我们描述了生长通过细胞分裂和核糖体含量对细胞大小和基因表达的双重影响。最后,我们阐明了群体运动、基因表达和细胞生长之间紧密控制的各个方面。这项工作为系统理解遗传和生理系统之间的反馈提供了基础。