Modulating Heterologous Gene Expression with Portable
mRNA-Stabilizing 5′-UTR Sequences
Posted on 2018-07-31 - 00:00
RNA half-lives are
frequently perceived as depending on too many
variables, and transcript stability is generally missed as a checkpoint
amenable to manipulation in synthetic designs. In this work, the contribution
of mRNA stability to heterologous protein production levels in E. coli has been inspected. To this end, we capitalized
on the wealth of information available on intrinsic mRNA stability
determinants, four of which were formatted as portable modules consisting
of 5′-untranslated regions (UTRs). The cognate DNA sequences
were then assembled in a genetic frame in which mRNA stability endowed
by the UTRs was the only variable to run expression of sfGFP. Reporter
output and Northern blot-based measurements of absolute mRNA half-lives
revealed that such UTRs were found to keep intact their ability to
modulate transcript stability when excised from their natural context
and placed as the upstream region of the reporter gene. By keeping
transcription fixed and combining different UTRs with a constant ribosomal
binding site, we showed that mRNA decay can be made the limiting constituent
of the overall gene expression flow. Moreover, the data indicated
that manipulating mRNA stability had little effect on expression noise
in the corresponding population. Finally, augmented heterologous expression
brought about by mRNA stability did not make cells more vulnerable
to resource-consuming stresses. The tangible result of this work was
a collection of well-characterized mRNA-stabilizing sequences that
can be composed along with other expression signals in any construct
following the assembly rules of the Standard European Vector Architecture
(SEVA) format.
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C. Viegas, Sandra; Apura, Patrícia; Martínez-García, Esteban; Lorenzo, Víctor de; Arraiano, Cecília
M. (2018). Modulating Heterologous Gene Expression with Portable
mRNA-Stabilizing 5′-UTR Sequences. ACS Publications. Collection. https://doi.org/10.1021/acssynbio.8b00191