Difference between revisions of "Team:Paris Bettencourt/Proteins Caging"

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                             <p>
 
                             <p>
                                    L:In Vitro characterization of the activity of the repressors using cell free system
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                                  To validate our design, we tested the three constructs in [figure 5] for both wtDronpa and mutDronpa with the logic gate of the dually repressed promoters in a cell free system giving us 96 combination.
 +
 
 
                             </p>
 
                             </p>
 
                             <div >
 
                             <div >
                                     <img id="fig7" src="" style="height:150px; width:500px; background-color:#E8292F" alt="put your image here"/>  
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                                     <img id="fig7" src="" "/>  
 
                                 </div>
 
                                 </div>
 
                                     <span  class="image-span text-center">
 
                                     <span  class="image-span text-center">
                                             <b>Figure 7:</b> Structure prediction of A) P22C2-dronpa fusion B)TetR-dronpa fusion C)HKCI-dronpa Fusion
+
                                             <b>Figure 7:</b> In Vitro characterization of the activity of the repressors using cell free system
 
                                     </span>
 
                                     </span>
                                     <p></p>
+
                                     <p> By illuminating our system with violet light, caging increase the repression (indicated by low mRFP levels) while cyan light decreases the repression (indicated by high mRFP levels) [Figure 7]. </p>
 
                            
 
                            
                            <div >
+
                                                   
                                    <img id="fig8" src="" style="height:150px; width:500px; background-color:#E8292F" alt="put your image here"/>
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                                </div>
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                                    <span  class="image-span text-center">
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                                            <b>Figure 8:</b> Results of microscopic photos to test for the aggregation of the Repressors
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                                    </span>
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                         </div>
 
                         </div>
 
                 </section>
 
                 </section>
                 <section>
+
                  
                                <h4>Discussion:</h4>
+
<div class="row">          
                      <div class="text1">
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                        </div>
                           
+
                </section>
                            <p>
+
                                    The transcription factors that we have tested bind DNA as Homodimers, In our original hypothesis we wanted to create repressors that are caged by violet light and uncaged by cyan light, following the design that was created and validated by The Lin lab. We  had two scenarios in mind for caging the repressors by Dronpa:
+
                            </p>
+
                            <p>
+
                                a) Binding of 2 dronpa domains to the repressors might prevent them from dimerization.
+
                            </p>
+
                            <p>
+
                                b) Since the repressors are very small in size, they might still be able to form a dimer. But in this case, this will result in the concentration of 4 copies of Dronpa which in turn will lead to an aggregation that will render the repressors nonfunctional.
+
                            </p>
+
                            <p>
+
                                    However, the results we have obtained from testing our parts in a cell free system were very surprising. By illuminating our system with Violet light, the repressors are activated (indicated by low mRFP levels)  while cyan light decreases their activity (indicated by high mRFP levels) Figure 7, which is the exact opposite of what we have expected.
+
                            </p>
+
                            <p>
+
                                    As an interpretation of these data, we came up with the following scenario.
+
                                    The three repressors that we have tested are very small in size, and sin
+
                                   
+
                            </p>
+
                      </div>
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                </section>
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                 <section>
 
                 <section>
 
                                 <h1>
 
                                 <h1>
                                                Caging T7 RNA polymerase with Dronpa:
+
                                Strategy II: Caging control the protein activity by causing conformational changes:
                                                </h1>
+
                        <div class="text1">
+
                           
+
                                <p>T7 RNA polymerase (RNAP)  transcribes only DNA downstream of a T7 promoter and it has a low error rate. Putting into account that T7 RNAP can undergo  dramatic conformational changes during the transition from an initiation complex to an elongation complex. We hypothesized that adding two copies of Dronpa might control the activity of T7 RNAP by altering its conformation. To test this hypothesis we made the following construct:
+
                                    </p>
+
  
                                    <div >
+
                                         </h1>
                                            <img id="fig9" src="" style="height:150px; width:500px; background-color:#E8292F" alt="put your image here"/>
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                      <div class="text1">
                                         </div>  
+
                         
                                            <span class="image-span text-center">
+
                                                 
+
                                            </span>
+
                                   
+
                                    <p>
+
                                       
+
                                        Results:
+
                                        </p>
+
                                        <div >
+
                                                <img id="fig9" src="" style="height:150px; width:500px; background-color:#E8292F" alt="put your image here"/>
+
                                        </div>
+
                                                <span  class="image-span text-center">
+
                                                     
+
                                                </span>
+
                                     
+
                            <p>
+
                                    L: Left, the structure of T7 RNAP binding DNA (PDB: 1t7p). Right:The prediction of the structure of Dronpa caging of T7 RNAP which suggests that the addition of the two dronpa copies is causing drastic changes in the  the structure of the polymerase.
+
                            </p>
+
 
                             <p>
 
                             <p>
                                    The inactivation of T7RNAP was confirmed using the following construct which is considered a self reporter as upon its activation mrfp should be generated.  
+
                                  T7 RNA polymerase (RNAP)  transcribes only DNA downstream of a T7 promoter and it has a low error rate. Putting into account that T7 RNAP flexibility as it undergoes dramatic conformational changes during the transition from an initiation complex to an elongation complex. We hypothesized that adding two copies of Dronpa might control the activity of T7 RNAP by altering its conformation. To test this hypothesis we made the following construct:
                                    By cloning the part and plating the cells overnight in the dark, no RFP was generated
+
                                   
+
 
                             </p>
 
                             </p>
 
                             <div >
 
                             <div >
                                     <img id="fig10" src="" style="height:150px; width:500px; background-color:#E8292F" alt="put your image here"/>  
+
                                     <img id="fig5" src="https://static.igem.org/mediawiki/2017/0/01/Aya_figure8.png"/>  
 
                                 </div>
 
                                 </div>
 
                                     <span  class="image-span text-center">
 
                                     <span  class="image-span text-center">
                                             1) image with GFP filter, 2) image with RFP filter, 3) Bright field images.  
+
                                             <b>Figure5:</b> A diagram of the design of  Dronpa-T7RNAP constructs.
 +
 
 
                                     </span>
 
                                     </span>
                           
 
                        </div>
 
                </section>
 
                <section>
 
                                <h4>Methods and material:</h4>
 
                        <div class="text1">
 
 
                              
 
                              
 
                             <p>
 
                             <p>
                                    Using error prone PCR we have obtained a version of Dronpa with 2 mutations I4V and R149H in the first dronpa domain and F78S in the second domain.
+
                                 
 +
By running a structure prediction test [figure 9],  the prediction indicates the that the addition of the two dronpa domains is causing drastic changes in the structure of T7 RNAP. In the original T7 RNAP structure the C and N termini are adjacent, so fusing the 2 dronpa domains to both termini is changing its conformation.  
 +
 
 
                             </p>
 
                             </p>
                            <ul>
 
                                <li>
 
                                    Using the standard assembly, we added the pt7 mrfp reporter (BBa_K1758105) to our constructs of T7RNAP-Dronpa wt and T7RNAP-Dronpa mut.</li>
 
                                <li>
 
                                    prepare overnight cultures of the colonies containing the 2 constructs ( T7RNAP-Dronpa wt + pt7 mrfp reporter) and ( T7RNAP-Dronpa mut + pt7 mrfp reporter) in LB with ampicillin
 
                                    </li>
 
                                <li>Using a loop, streak colonies of each cultures on 2 plates (LB agar + ampicillin)</li>
 
                                <li>Incubate the plates overnight in 37 degree with 2 conditions, dark and cyan</li>
 
                                <li>Visualize the plates using bright field, gfp and rfp filters</li>
 
                            </ul>
 
 
                             <div >
 
                             <div >
                                     <img id="fig11" src="" style="height:150px; width:500px; background-color:#E8292F" alt="put your image here"/>  
+
                                     <img id="fig6" src="https://static.igem.org/mediawiki/2017/a/a9/Aya_figure_9.png" />  
 
                                 </div>
 
                                 </div>
 
                                     <span  class="image-span text-center">
 
                                     <span  class="image-span text-center">
                                         
+
                                            <b>Figure 6: </b>  A) The structure of T7 RNAP binding DNA (PDB: 1t7p)  B)The prediction of the structure of Dronpa caging of T7 RNAP, in red circles the C and N termini of the protein.
 +
                                           
 
                                     </span>
 
                                     </span>
 
                              
 
                              
                        </div>
 
                </section>
 
                <section>
 
                                <h4>Discussion:</h4>
 
                        <div class="text1">
 
                             
 
                                <p>In our construct for Dronpa we have used a T7 terminator, which is known to have a high readthrough depending on its contextuality. This suggests that the red colonies observed in figure () are more likely to be due to a transcription readthrough rather than T7RNAP activation.</p>
 
                        </div>
 
                </section>
 
                <section>
 
                                <h1>Caging β-galactosidase with Dronpa: </h1>
 
                        <div class="text1">
 
                           
 
                            <p>Dronpa has been used successfully to cage proteases (Ref) and kinases (Ref). However it has been never used for optical control of enzymes with small substrates, as even if the enzyme is caged by 2 dronpa domains, that shouldn’t stop small molecules from reaching the enzyme’s active site. </p>
 
                            <p>β-galactosidase  activity is measured by X-Gal (5-Bromo-4-chloro-3-indolyl-β-D-galactopyranoside) which is a chromogenic substrate that produces a blue color that can easily be detected visually. We made the following construct and we put it under testing.</p>
 
                            <p>Results:</p>
 
                            <div >
 
                                    <img id="fig12" src="" style="height:150px; width:500px; background-color:#E8292F" alt="put your image here"/>
 
                                </div>
 
                                    <span class="image-span text-center">
 
                                          Legend
 
                                    </span>
 
                         
 
                            <div >
 
                                    <img id="fig13" src="" style="height:150px; width:500px; background-color:#E8292F" alt="put your image here"/>
 
                                </div>
 
                                    <span  class="image-span text-center">
 
                                            Native PAGE A) image with gfp filter B) Coomassie stain for Dilutions of wild type dronpa protein(wells 1-5) and Mut dronpa protein (wells 6-10)  to confirm the previous results aren’t due to different protein concentration
 
                                    </span>
 
                         
 
                        </div>
 
                </section>
 
                <section>
 
                                <h4>Methods:</h4>
 
                        <div class="text1">
 
                           
 
                            <p>Grow an overnight culture  16 h in LB with Ampicillin added</p>
 
                            <p> - Protein extraction using the bugbusters reagent  and following the bugbuster protocol</p>
 
                            <p>Shining light :</p>
 
                            <div >
 
                                    <img id="fig12" src="" style="height:150px; width:500px; background-color:#E8292F" alt="put your image here"/>
 
                                </div>
 
                                    <span  class="image-span text-center">
 
                                          Legend
 
                                    </span>
 
                         
 
 
                             <p>
 
                             <p>
                                    The proteins extracted from the 3 different versions of pdDronpa were divided in 2 pcr tubes for each were light were shown for 30 seconds and for 30 minutes ( 2 different conditions ) light intensity is 20 mW/cm2
+
                                  The inactivation of T7RNAP was confirmed by using a reporter mrfp construct [figure 10] to indicate the activity of T7 RNAP as fluorescence output. By plating the cells overnight in dark and cyan conditions, no RFP was generated.
                                   
+
 
 
                             </p>
 
                             </p>
 +
                                             
 
                         </div>
 
                         </div>
                </section>
+
                </section>
                <section>
+
               
                                <h4>UV light:</h4>
+
 
                        <div class="text1">
+
 
                           
+
 
                            <p>For each of the 3 different versions of pdDronpa they were placed in a pcr tubes and UV Led were shone for 30 seconds 8</p>
+
 
 +
 
 +
 
 +
 
 +
 
 +
 
 +
 
 
                             <p> - After light illumination, X-Gal  dissolved in DMSO and diluted in PBS was added to to reach the final concentration of 5x</p>
 
                             <p> - After light illumination, X-Gal  dissolved in DMSO and diluted in PBS was added to to reach the final concentration of 5x</p>
 
                             <table>
 
                             <table>

Revision as of 01:14, 2 November 2017

PROTEIN PHOTOCAGING

Introduction

Photoreceptors are valuable optogenetic tools which, upon coupling with other proteins, activate certain functions in a controlled spatial and temporal manner when exposed to the appropriate wavelength of light. However, the usage of photoreceptors suffers from many drawbacks including the toxicity of the light to the cells, photobleaching of the receptors and the delay in the response i.e. the time needed for transcription and translation of the target protein to be controlled-. The emergence of Fluorescent light-inducible proteins is an attractive alternative that doesn’t suffer from these drawbacks.

Dronpa is one of the reversible photoswitchable fluorescent proteins (RSFPs), these are proteins that are switched on and off reversibly by specific wavelengths. Dronpa is switched on by default “fluorescent” and is switched off when illuminated by cyan light (~500nm). Dronpa Fluorescence is recovered by shining violet light (~400nm)

put your image here
Figure 1: an illustration of the on/off switching of dronpa and the associated alternation between the monomer/dimer structures

The conformational changes that are associated with the on/off switching of Dronpa Lys145Asn has been used in a design that facilitates the optical control of protein activities. When Dronpa domains are fused to both termini of an enzyme of interest, the Dronpa domains form a tetramer and cage the enzyme leading to its inactivation. By Shining cyan light, Dronpa is switched off and the tetramer dissociates into monomers, as a result the caged enzyme is activated (1) (3).

put your image here
Figure 2:A fluorescent light-inducible protein design based on Dronpa Lys145Asn- From Zhou, X.X. and Lin, M.Z., 2013.

Results

1) Design of protein Caging:

In our design, we had two copies of Dronpa Fluorescent Protein with two BsaI cutting site in between to allow the insertion of our genes of interest .

Figure 3: construct design for 2 Dronpa domains

2) Molecular mechanism:

The enzyme of interest is placed between 2 copies of Dronpa fluorescent protein via a linker. By switching on Dronpa (violet light) the protein of interest is caged as the two copies would dimerize. And by switching off Dronpa (cyan light), the two copies would dissociate which will result in activation of the protein of interest.

Figure 4: Shining cyan and violet light using LEDS.

3) MutDronpa:

Using error prone PCR we have obtained several versions of Dronpa with several mutations from which we picked one version that interested us the most, as it had an R149H mutation which is located in the dimer interface. We proceeded in our experiments with 2 variants of Dronpa. The original version was annotated as wtDronpa and the mutated version was annotated as mutDronpa which has 2 mutations I4V and R149H in the first dronpa domain and an F78S mutation in the second domain.

Strategy I: Caging increase -instead of block- the activity of caged proteins:

Repressors bind DNA and setback transcription. In our project we developed a logic gate at the promoter level by creating dually repressed promoters using different combinations of the operators for TetR, P22 c2 and HK CI and it was interesting for us to test if these repressors can be controlled by light thus creating a light-inducible library of transcription factors. Dronpa hasn’t been used to control transcription factors, so we developed the following constructs to test if Dronpa can control proteins that function by dimerization.

Figure5: A diagram of the design of Dronpa-Repressors constructs.

By running a structure prediction test [figure 6], we could obtain some information regarding the expected behavior of the output of our design. In our design, the two Dronpa domains are connected to the repressors via long flexible linkers, which indicates that homodimers of repressors are likely to be formed even if caged by dronpa. The folding of the repressors that we are testing will be fast due to their small size and simple structure, which will make the dimerization of 2 copies of the repressors -before the complete folding of the second dronpa domains and caging the repressor- very likely. We expected in our design that the repressor homodimer will bind to its operator and once the second domain of Dronpa is fully folded, it will cage the already bound repressor to the DNA thus further stabilizing the repression when the violet light is shone.

Figure 6: Structure prediction of A) P22C2-dronpa fusion B)TetR-dronpa fusion C)HKCI-dronpa Fusion

To validate our design, we tested the three constructs in [figure 5] for both wtDronpa and mutDronpa with the logic gate of the dually repressed promoters in a cell free system giving us 96 combination.

Figure 7: In Vitro characterization of the activity of the repressors using cell free system

By illuminating our system with violet light, caging increase the repression (indicated by low mRFP levels) while cyan light decreases the repression (indicated by high mRFP levels) [Figure 7].

Strategy II: Caging control the protein activity by causing conformational changes:

T7 RNA polymerase (RNAP) transcribes only DNA downstream of a T7 promoter and it has a low error rate. Putting into account that T7 RNAP flexibility as it undergoes dramatic conformational changes during the transition from an initiation complex to an elongation complex. We hypothesized that adding two copies of Dronpa might control the activity of T7 RNAP by altering its conformation. To test this hypothesis we made the following construct:

Figure5: A diagram of the design of Dronpa-T7RNAP constructs.

By running a structure prediction test [figure 9], the prediction indicates the that the addition of the two dronpa domains is causing drastic changes in the structure of T7 RNAP. In the original T7 RNAP structure the C and N termini are adjacent, so fusing the 2 dronpa domains to both termini is changing its conformation.

Figure 6: A) The structure of T7 RNAP binding DNA (PDB: 1t7p) B)The prediction of the structure of Dronpa caging of T7 RNAP, in red circles the C and N termini of the protein.

The inactivation of T7RNAP was confirmed by using a reporter mrfp construct [figure 10] to indicate the activity of T7 RNAP as fluorescence output. By plating the cells overnight in dark and cyan conditions, no RFP was generated.

- After light illumination, X-Gal dissolved in DMSO and diluted in PBS was added to to reach the final concentration of 5x

Dilution factor 1 1.25 1.66 2.5 5
Ul of Proteins 25 20 15 10 5
Ul ofPBS - 5 10 15 20

Ref:

Zhou, X.X., Chung, H.K., Lam, A.J. and Lin, M.Z., 2012. Optical control of protein activity by fluorescent protein domains. Science, 338(6108), pp.810-814.

Zhou, X.X. and Lin, M.Z., 2013. Photoswitchable fluorescent proteins: ten years of colorful chemistry and exciting applications. Current opinion in chemical biology, 17(4), pp.682-690.

Zhou, X.X., Fan, L.Z., Li, P., Shen, K. and Lin, M.Z., 2017. Optical control of cell signaling by single-chain photoswitchable kinases. Science, 355(6327), pp.836-842.


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