posted on 2023-08-10, 18:05authored byDominic Lauzon, Alexis Vallée-Bélisle
The emergence of life has relied on chemical communication
and
the ability to integrate multiple chemical inputs into a specific
output. Two mechanisms are typically employed by nature to do so:
allostery and multivalent activation. Although a better understanding
of allostery has recently provided a variety of strategies to optimize
the binding affinity, sensitivity, and specificity of molecular switches,
mechanisms relying on multivalent activation remain poorly understood.
As a proof of concept to compare the thermodynamic basis and design
principles of both mechanisms, we have engineered a highly programmable
DNA-based switch that can be triggered by either a multivalent or
an allosteric DNA activator. By precisely designing the binding interface
of the multivalent activator, we show that the affinity, dynamic range,
and activated half-life of the molecular switch can be programed with
even more versatility than when using an allosteric activator. The
simplicity by which the activation properties of molecular switches
can be rationally tuned using multivalent assembly suggests that it
may find many applications in biosensing, drug delivery, synthetic
biology, and molecular computation fields, where precise control over
the transduction of binding events into a specific output is key.