posted on 2021-06-23, 18:34authored byMasoud Norouzi, Sabina Panfilov, Keith Pardee
The field of cell-free
synthetic biology is an emerging branch
of engineered biology that allows for rapid prototyping of biological
designs and, in its own right, is becoming a venue for the in vitro operation of gene circuit-based sensors and biomanufacturing.
To date, the related DNA encoded tools that operate in cell-free reactions
have primarily relied on plasmid DNA inputs, as linear templates are
highly susceptible to degradation by exonucleases present in cell-free
extracts. This incompatibility has precluded significant throughput,
time and cost benefits that could be gained with the use of linear
DNA in the cell-free expression workflow. Here to tackle this limitation,
we report that terminal incorporation of Ter binding sites for the
DNA-binding protein Tus enables highly efficient protection of linear
expression templates encoding mCherry and deGFP. In Escherichia
coli extracts, our method compares favorably with the previously
reported GamS-mediated protection scheme. Importantly, we extend the
Tus-Ter system to Vibrio natriegens extracts, and
demonstrate that this simple and easily implemented method can enable
an unprecedented plasmid-level expression from linear templates in
this emerging chassis organism.