The Notch protein is one of the most mechanistically direct transmembrane receptors – the intracellular domain contains a transcriptional regulator that is released from the membrane when engagement of the cognate extracellular ligand induces intramembrane proteolysis. We find that chimeric forms of Notch, in which both the extracellular sensor module and the intracellular transcriptional module are replaced with heterologous protein domains, can serve as a general platform for generating novel cell-cell contact signaling pathways. Synthetic Notch (synNotch) pathways can drive user-defined functional responses in diverse mammalian cell types. Because individual synNotch pathways do not share common signaling intermediates, the pathways are functionally orthogonal. Thus multiple synNotch receptors can be used in the same cell to achieve combinatorial integration of environmental cues, including Boolean response programs, multi-cellular signaling cascades, and self-organized cellular patterns. SynNotch receptors provide extraordinary flexibility in engineering cells with customized sensing/response behaviors to user-specified extracellular cues.
Accurate modification of the 3 billion-base-pair human genome requires tools with exceptional sequence specificity. Here, we describe a general strategy for the design of enzymes that target a single site within the genome. We generated chimeric zinc finger recombinases with cooperative DNA-binding and catalytic specificities that integrate transgenes with >98% accuracy into the human genome. These modular recombinases can be reprogrammed: New combinations of zinc finger domains and serine recombinase catalytic domains generate novel enzymes with distinct substrate sequence specificities. Because of their accuracy and versatility, the recombinases/integrases reported in this work are suitable for a wide variety of applications in biological research, medicine, and biotechnology where accurate delivery of DNA is desired.recombinases ͉ zinc finger ͉ gene delivery ͉ gene targeting ͉ protein engineering T he postgenomic era of medicine will be defined by our ability to achieve biological control through genetic reprogramming. New tools are needed to accurately rewrite the genomic script and specifically alter genes, gene expression, and epigenetic state at any desired loci. To date, no enzyme-natural or synthetic-has been able to accurately modify only a single targeted site within the human genome (1). Scientists in biology, biotechnology, stem cell research, and gene therapy currently rely on naturally occurring enzymes to perform functions like DNA integration and excision. However, these enzymes recognize multiple sites within the human genome, often resulting in off-target DNA integration and chromosomal translocation (2-6). Our recent work with serine resolvases and invertases led us to hypothesize that we could use a modular approach that capitalizes on cooperative specificity to design synthetic enzymes that would uniquely recognize a single site within the 3 billion-base-pair human genome and allow us to deliver DNA specifically to this site (Fig. 1A) (7).In their native contexts, serine resolvases and invertases selectively recombine target sites within the same DNA molecule. This intramolecular specificity is assured by obligate assembly of large protein complexes, wherein accessory factors bound at neighboring sites impose topological and spatial constraints on the recombination reaction (8). Hyperactive mutants of several serine resolvases and invertases have been discovered that efficiently catalyze unrestricted recombination between minimal dimer-binding sites (Table S1) (9, 10). Furthermore, unlike other site-specific recombinases, serine resolvases and invertases are well suited to synthetic reengineering. These enzymes are modular in both structure and function, each comprised of a distinct catalytic domain flexibly tethered to a small helix-turnhelix DNA-binding domain (DBD). However, these DBDs are poorly suited for accurate genomic recombination (11) because the recognition motifs are short (4-6 bp) and degenerate (12, 13).In contrast, zinc finger DNA-binding proteins recognize target sites of v...
Routine manipulation of cellular genomes is contingent upon the development of proteins and enzymes with programmable DNA sequence specificity. Here we describe the structure-guided reprogramming of the DNA sequence specificity of the invertase Gin from bacteriophage Mu and Tn3 resolvase from Escherichia coli. Structure-guided and comparative sequence analyses were used to predict a network of amino acid residues that mediate resolvase and invertase DNA sequence specificity. Using saturation mutagenesis and iterative rounds of positive antibiotic selection, we identified extensively redesigned and highly convergent resolvase and invertase populations in the context of engineered zinc-finger recombinase (ZFR) fusion proteins. Reprogrammed variants selectively catalyzed recombination of nonnative DNA sequences >10,000-fold more effectively than their parental enzymes. Alanine-scanning mutagenesis revealed the molecular basis of resolvase and invertase DNA sequence specificity. When used as rationally designed ZFR heterodimers, the reprogrammed enzyme variants site-specifically modified unnatural and asymmetric DNA sequences. Early studies on the directed evolution of serine recombinase DNA sequence specificity produced enzymes with relaxed substrate specificity as a result of randomly incorporated mutations. In the current study, we focused our mutagenesis exclusively on DNA determinants, leading to redesigned enzymes that remained highly specific and directed transgene integration into the human genome with >80% accuracy. These results demonstrate that unique resolvase and invertase derivatives can be developed to site-specifically modify the human genome in the context of zinc-finger recombinase fusion proteins.gene targeting | protein engineering | site-specific recombination | zinc-finger recombinase S ite-specific recombinases are essential for a variety of diverse biological processes, including the integration and excision of viral genomes, the transposition of mobile genetic elements, and the regulation of gene expression (1). Recently, site-specific recombinases have emerged as powerful tools for advanced genome engineering (2, 3). The exquisite sequence specificities of recombination systems such as Cre/lox, FLP/FRT, and φC31/ att allow researchers to accurately modify genetic information for a variety of applications (4-6). However, DNA sequence constraints imposed by site-specific recombinases make routine modification of cellular genomes contingent on the presence of artificially introduced recognition sequences. As a result, a number of attempts have been made to circumvent or reprogram the strict DNA sequence specificities observed in these systems (7-9). Despite these efforts, engineered site-specific recombinase variants often exhibit considerably relaxed DNA sequence specificities (8, 10-14), a detrimental byproduct that often results in adverse off-target chromosomal modification (15-17). Thus, there is significant interest in the development of generalized protein engineering strategies capable...
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