Membrane
proteins are present in a wide array of cellular processes
from primary and secondary metabolite synthesis to electron transport
and single carbon metabolism. A key barrier to applying membrane proteins
industrially is their difficult functional production. Beyond expression,
folding, and membrane insertion, membrane protein activity is influenced
by the physicochemical properties of the associated membrane, making
it difficult to achieve optimal membrane protein performance outside
the endogenous host. In this review, we highlight recent work on production
of membrane proteins in membrane augmented cell-free systems (CFSs)
and applications thereof. CFSs lack membranes and can thus be augmented
with user-specified, tunable, mimetic membranes to generate customized
environments for production of functional membrane proteins of interest.
Membrane augmented CFSs would enable the synthesis of more complex
plant secondary metabolites, the growth and division of synthetic
cells for drug delivery and cell therapeutic applications, as well
as enable green energy applications including methane capture and
artificial photosynthesis.
Dynamic, multi-input gene regulatory networks (GRNs) are ubiquitous in nature. Multilayer CRISPR-based genetic circuits hold great promise for building GRNs akin to those found in naturally occurring biological systems. We develop an approach for creating high-performing activatable promoters that can be assembled into deep, wide, and multi-input CRISPR-activation and -interference (CRISPRa/i) GRNs. By integrating sequence-based design and in vivo screening, we engineer activatable promoters that achieve up to 1,000-fold dynamic range in an
Escherichia coli
-based cell-free system. These components enable CRISPRa GRNs that are six layers deep and four branches wide. We show the generalizability of the promoter engineering workflow by improving the dynamic range of the light-dependent EL222 optogenetic system from 6-fold to 34-fold. Additionally, high dynamic range promoters enable CRISPRa systems mediated by small molecules and protein–protein interactions. We apply these tools to build input-responsive CRISPRa/i GRNs, including feedback loops, logic gates, multilayer cascades, and dynamic pulse modulators. Our work provides a generalizable approach for the design of high dynamic range activatable promoters and enables classes of gene regulatory functions in cell-free systems.
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