Reescrita de síntese química de um genoma bacteriano para alcançar flexibilidade de design e funcionalidade biológica

terça-feira, abril 02, 2019

Chemical synthesis rewriting of a bacterial genome to achieve design flexibility and biological functionality

Jonathan E. Venetz, Luca Del Medico, Alexander Wölfle, Philipp Schächle, Yves Bucher, Donat Appert, Flavia Tschan, Carlos E. Flores-Tinoco, Mariëlle van Kooten, Rym Guennoun, Samuel Deutsch, Matthias Christen, and Beat Christen

PNAS published ahead of print April 1, 2019 


Edited by David Baker, University of Washington, Seattle, WA, and approved March 6, 2019 (received for review October 29, 2018)


Sequence design flexibility within rewritten C. eth-2.0 genes. 
Source/Fonte: PNAS

Significance

The fundamental biological functions of a living cell are stored within the DNA sequence of its genome. Classical genetic approaches dissect the functioning of biological systems by analyzing individual genes, yet uncovering the essential gene set of an organism has remained very challenging. It is argued that the rewriting of entire genomes through the process of chemical synthesis provides a powerful and complementary research concept to understand how essential functions are programed into genomes.

Abstract

Understanding how to program biological functions into artificial DNA sequences remains a key challenge in synthetic genomics. Here, we report the chemical synthesis and testing of Caulobacter ethensis-2.0 (C. eth-2.0), a rewritten bacterial genome composed of the most fundamental functions of a bacterial cell. We rebuilt the essential genome of Caulobacter crescentus through the process of chemical synthesis rewriting and studied the genetic information content at the level of its essential genes. Within the 785,701-bp genome, we used sequence rewriting to reduce the number of encoded genetic features from 6,290 to 799. Overall, we introduced 133,313 base substitutions, resulting in the rewriting of 123,562 codons. We tested the biological functionality of the genome design in C. crescentus by transposon mutagenesis. Our analysis revealed that 432 essential genes of C. eth-2.0, corresponding to 81.5% of the design, are equal in functionality to natural genes. These findings suggest that neither changing mRNA structure nor changing the codon context have significant influence on biological functionality of synthetic genomes. Discovery of 98 genes that lost their function identified essential genes with incorrect annotation, including a limited set of 27 genes where we uncovered noncoding control features embedded within protein-coding sequences. In sum, our results highlight the promise of chemical synthesis rewriting to decode fundamental genome functions and its utility toward the design of improved organisms for industrial purposes and health benefits.

Caulobacter crescentus chemical genome synthesis genome rewriting synonymous recoding de novo DNA synthesis

Footnotes

↵1To whom correspondence may be addressed. Email: matthias.christen@imsb.biol.ethz.ch or beat.christen@imsb.biol.ethz.ch.

Author contributions: M.C. and B.C. designed research; J.E.V., L.D.M., A.W., P.S., Y.B., D.A., F.T., C.E.F.-T., M.v.K., R.G., and S.D. performed research; J.E.V., L.D.M., M.C., and B.C. analyzed data; and J.E.V., M.C., and B.C. wrote the paper.

Conflict of interest statement: Eidgenössische Technische Hochschule holds a patent application (WO2017085249A1) with M.C. and B.C. as inventors that covers functional testing of synthetic genomes. M.C. and B.C. hold shares from Gigabases Switzerland AG.

This article is a PNAS Direct Submission.

Data deposition: The sequence of the C. eth-2.0 genome reported in this paper has been deposited in the National Center for Biotechnology Information database (GenBank accession no. CP035535).

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