Design criteria for synthetic riboswitches acting on transcription

Design criteria for synthetic riboswitches acting on transcription

Abstract

Riboswitches are RNA-based regulators of gene expression composed of a ligand-sensing aptamer domain followed by an overlapping expression platform. The regulation occurs at either the level of transcription (by formation of terminator or antiterminator structures) or translation (by presentation or sequestering of the ribosomal binding site). Due to a modular composition, these elements can be manipulated by combining different aptamers and expression platforms and therefore represent useful tools to regulate gene expression in synthetic biology. Using computationally designed theophylline-dependent riboswitches we show that 2 parameters, terminator hairpin stability and folding traps, have a major impact on the functionality of the designed constructs. These have to be considered very carefully during design phase. Furthermore, a combination of several copies of individual riboswitches leads to a much improved activation ratio between induced and uninduced gene activity and to a linear dose-dependent increase in reporter gene expression. Such serial arrangements of synthetic riboswitches closely resemble their natural counterparts and may form the basis for simple quantitative read out systems for the detection of specific target molecules in the cell.

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Authors
  • Wachsmuth, Manja
  • Domin, Gesine
  • Lorenz, Ronny
  • Serfling, Robert
  • Findeiß, Sven
  • Stadler, Peter F.
  • Mörl, Mario
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Shortfacts
Category
Journal Paper
Divisions
Bioinformatics and Computational Biology
Journal or Publication Title
RNA Biology 2015
ISSN
1547-6286
Page Range
pp. 221-231
Number
2
Volume
12
Date
2015
Official URL
http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/15476286.2015.1017235
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