6533b861fe1ef96bd12c59ea
RESEARCH PRODUCT
Optogenetic Control of Bacterial Expression by Red Light
Elina MultamäkiAndrés García De FuentesOleksii SieryiAlexander BykovUwe GerkenAmérico Tavares RanzaniJürgen KöhlerIgor MeglinskiAndreas MöglichHeikki Takalasubject
HistoryfytokromitSIGNALING MECHANISMHistidine KinaseLightPolymers and PlasticsBiomedical EngineeringHISTIDINE KINASESfotobiologiasensory photoreceptorBiochemistry Genetics and Molecular Biology (miscellaneous)Industrial and Manufacturing EngineeringbakteeritOPTICAL CONTROLgeeniekspressioBusiness and International ManagementoptogeneticsHEME OXYGENASEGENE-EXPRESSIONphytochromeoptogenetiikkaPHOTORECEPTORSBacteriaBiliverdineREARRANGEMENTSBACTERIOPHYTOCHROMESGeneral MedicinePhosphoric Monoester HydrolasesOptogeneticsreseptorit (biokemia)two-component systemESCHERICHIA-COLIgene expression1182 Biochemistry cell and molecular biology3111 BiomedicinePhytochromevalosignal transductiondescription
In optogenetics, as in nature, sensory photoreceptors serve to control cellular processes by light. Bacteriophytochrome (BphP) photoreceptors sense red and far-red light via a biliverdin chromophore and, in response, cycle between the spectroscopically, structurally, and functionally distinct Pr and Pfr states. BphPs commonly belong to two-component systems that control the phosphorylation of cognate response regulators and downstream gene expression through histidine kinase modules. We recently demonstrated that the paradigm BphP from Deinococcus radiodurans exclusively acts as a phosphatase but that its photosensory module can control the histidine kinase activity of homologous receptors. Here, we apply this insight to reprogram two widely used setups for bacterial gene expression from blue-light to red-light control. The resultant pREDusk and pREDawn systems allow gene expression to be regulated down and up, respectively, uniformly under red light by 100-fold or more. Both setups are realized as portable, single plasmids that encode all necessary components including the biliverdin-producing machinery. The triggering by red light affords high spatial resolution down to the single-cell level. As pREDusk and pREDawn respond sensitively to red light, they support multiplexing with optogenetic systems sensitive to other light colors. Owing to the superior tissue penetration of red light, the pREDawn system can be triggered at therapeutically safe light intensities through material layers, replicating the optical properties of the skin and skull. Given these advantages, pREDusk and pREDawn enable red-light-regulated expression for diverse use cases in bacteria. peerReviewed
year | journal | country | edition | language |
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2022-08-23 | SSRN Electronic Journal |