Team:Peking/Project/BioSensors

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Biosensor Introduction

One advantage of biosensors is that the detection profile of a particular biosensor is usually limited to a few specific signals, thus making biosensor output highly informative. Another advantage is the biosensor response method: it usually involves no more than transcription and translation, both of which are automatically operated by the living cells themselves; so it is more convenient to use, compared with conventional chemical methods that rely heavily on complicated measuring devices. Additionally, originating from functional elements of natural biological systems, biosensors are subject to various tuning methods such as directed evolution, point mutagenesis or other genetic manipulations.

A biosensor typically consists of a detector and a reporter; the input signal activates the detector, through which the reporter is stimulated to emit the output signal. In our project, the biosensor input signals are aromatic compounds and the output is the expression of a reporter gene; the aromatics are supposed to be sensed by transcriptional regulators from the bacteria living in aromatics-rich environment.

Through the bioinformatic mining, we obtained 17 aromatics-sensing transcriptional regulators (see Sensor Mining). Noting the fact that their expected aromatics-sensing profiles overlap a lot, we finally determined 8 transcriptional regulators whose profiles could be combined to cover the overall spectrum of aromatic compound species (Table 1).

Sensor Expected Aromatics-sensing Profile Source
XylS BzO; 2-MeBzO; 3-MeBzO; 2,3-DMeBzO; 3,4-DMeBzO Pseudomonas putida
XylR TOL; m-Xyl; 3-ClTOL Pseudomonas putida
HbpR 2-HBP; 2,6'-DHBP Pseudomonas azelaica
HcaR PPA; 3-HPPA; 3,4-DHPPA Escherichia coli
HpaR 3-HPAA; 4-HPAA; 3,4-DHPAA Escherichia coli
PaaX PAASCoA Escherichia coli
DmpR Phl; 2-MePhl; 3-MePhl; 4-MePhl; 2-ClPhl Pseudomonas putida
NahR 4-MeSaA; 4-ClSaA; 5-ClSaA; SaA; 3-IBzO Pseudomonas putida

Next we focused on constructing biosensors with low basal level, high induction ratio, and robust detection profiles. The coding sequences of these 8 transcriptional regulators were obtained by either chemical synthesis or PCR amplification. They were then incorporated into our biosensor circuit design (Fig. 1):

It can be expected that the primary construction of a biosensor circuit might not work. For the fine-tuning, a library of constitutive promoters and a library of RBS sequences, both of different strengths, were utilized to genetically tailor the expression of transcriptional regulators and sfGFP, respectively (Fig. 2).

After sparing no efforts to fine-tune the circuits, we have successfully constructed a comprehensive collection of high-performance aromatics-sening biosensors, including XylS, XylR, HbpR, HcaR, DmpR. and NahR. Results showed that a large variety of aromatic compounds have been taken into the detection profile of our toolkit (Fig. 3). See the detailed information about the performance of individual biosensors.

To allow the combination of these biosensors to analyze aromatics profiles of practical samples, the synergistic and antagonistic effects between inducers, in another word, the orthogonality, should be carefully assessed. The results showed that, within a general range of inducer concentration, the orthogonality of our biosensors makes them effective at profiling practical samples (Fig. 4).

Figure 1. Schematic diagram for the design frame of biosensor circuits
A constitutive promoter (Pc) constitutively expresses the transcriptional regulator protein on the low-copy backbone pSB4K5; the cognate promoter of the transcriptional regulator (TF) controls the expression of the reporter gene, super-fold green fluorescent protein (sfGFP, a novel and robust GFP variant designed for in vivo measurement of protein expression levels); its backbone is high-copy pUC57. Left orange arrow, Pc promoter; right orange arrow, the promoter regulated by the aromatics-sensing transcriptional regulator; green ovals, Ribosome Binding Sites (RBS); red hexagons, transcriptional terminators; dark cyan squares, gene coding sequences.

Figure 2. Libraries of promoters and RBS sequences used for the fine-tuning of biosensor circuits.
Pc promoter library was exploited to fine-tune the expression level of transcriptional regulator: J23106, J23105, J23114, J23117, J23109 and J23113. The RBS library includes B0031, B0032, B0033 and B0034 to tailor the expression level of reporter gene sfGFP. Left orange arrow, Pc promoter; right orange arrow, the promoter regulated by the aromatics-sensing transcriptional regulator; green ovals, Ribosome Binding Sites (RBS); red hexagons, transcriptional terminators; dark cyan squares, gene coding sequences.

Figure 3. The aromatics spectrum showing the aromatics-sensing profiles of our individual biosensors.
Each color segment in the central spectrum represents the detection profile of a biosensor. Structural formula highlighted in color stand for the aromatic compounds that can be detected by our biosensors. The "plug" icon in the figure legend stand for Adaptors, enzymes that convert undetectable compounds into detectable aromatics, thus to expand the detection capacity of some biosensors. Click Here for the summary table of the aromatics spectrum and aromatics-sensing profiles of individual biosensors.

Figure 4. Summary of the orthogonality between the sensing-profiles of 4 representative biosensors.
The transcriptional regulator-specific inducer(s) of XylS, NahR, HbpR, and DmpR are all highly orthogonal to each other (e.g., although the sensing profiles of NahR and XylS overlap to some extent, in the orthogonality test we used NahR-specific and XylS-specific inducers and they proved to be really orthogonal), which is consistent with our expectation. Click Here to see the detailed information about the orthogonality tests.