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Engineering Forisome Scaffolds: Elucidating Spatial Self-Assembly Patterning of Bio-inorganic Complexes

Smallwood, Chuck R.; Podlevsky, Joshua P.; Snow, Todd S.; Ryan, Emmarie C.

Organisms can synthesize biomaterials incorporating an array of naturally occurring elements while overcoming challenges and insults. Although, it is known that most cellular biomaterials are synthesized in specialized cellular compartments, there are knowledge gaps about how organic/inorganic biomaterial synthesis is orchestrated inside cells. In addition, there is great potential in understanding how individual monomers can self-assembly into organized patterns to form responsive biomaterials. Forisomes are a natural responsive biomaterial found in legume plants that serve as a plug sieve element in the plant phloem that undergo anisotropic conformational changes by rapid (<1 s) ATP-independent from condensed spindle to plug-like form, triggered by the influx of Ca2+. Addressing principles of forisome synthesis and assembly will determine how biomaterials containing inorganic elements self-assemble and conduct chemical modification to produce biomaterials or undergo biomineralization. We employ transcription and translation (TXTL) using cell-free expression systems for forisome monomer expression, self-assembly, and pattern probing. We conducted experiments to precisely control forisome proteins synthesis of various monomers SEO1, SEO2, SEO3, and SEO4 to explore self- assembly. We demonstrate forisome self-assembly of the SEO monomers is possible and indicate unique monomer fluorescent labeling patterns that require additional analysis. We investigated locations and linkers for adding tetracysteine tag fluorophore probes to determine impacts of self-assembly and anisotropic conformational changes.

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CERES: CRISPR Engineering for the Rapid Enhancement of Strains

Ruffing, Anne R.; Podlevsky, Joshua P.; Krishnakumar, Raga K.; Smallwood, Chuck R.; Dallo, Tessa C.; Torres, Xavier M.; Kolker, Stephanie K.; Morgan, John M.; King, Nathaphon Y.; Marsing, Melissa M.

Previous strain development efforts for cyanobacteria have failed to achieve the necessary productivities needed to support economic biofuel production. We proposed to develop CRISPR Engineering for Rapid Enhancement of Strains (CERES). We developed genetic and computational tools to enable future high-throughput screening of CRISPR interference (CRISPRi) libraries in the cyanobacterium Synechococcus sp. PCC 7002, including: (1) Operon- SEQer: an ensemble of algorithms for predicting operon pairs using RNA-seq data, (2) experimental characterization and machine learning prediction of gRNA design rules for CRISPRi, and (3) a shuttle vector for gene expression. These tools lay the foundation for CRISPR library screening to develop cyanobacterial strains that are optimized for growth or metabolite production under a wide range of environmental conditions. The optimization of cyanobacterial strains will directly advance U.S. energy and climate security by enabling domestic biofuel production while simultaneously mitigating atmospheric greenhouse gases through photoautotrophic fixation of carbon dioxide.

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Use of anti-CRISPR protein AcrIIA4 as a capture ligand for CRISPR/Cas9 detection

Biosensors and Bioelectronics

Johnston, Robert K.; Seamon, Kyle J.; Saada, Edwin A.; Podlevsky, Joshua P.; Branda, Steven B.; Timlin, Jerilyn A.; Harper, Jason C.

The clustered regularly interspaced short palindromic repeats (CRISPR)/CRISPR-associated protein 9 (Cas9) ribonucleoprotein (RNP) complex is an RNA-guided DNA-nuclease that is part of the bacterial adaptive immune system. CRISPR/Cas9 RNP has been adapted for targeted genome editing within cells and whole organisms with new applications vastly outpacing detection and quantification of gene-editing reagents. Detection of the CRISPR/Cas9 RNP within biological samples is critical for assessing gene-editing reagent delivery efficiency, retention, persistence, and distribution within living organisms. Conventional detection methods are effective, yet the expense and lack of scalability for antibody-based affinity reagents limit these techniques for clinical and/or field settings. This necessitates the development of low cost, scalable CRISPR/Cas9 RNP affinity reagents as alternatives or augments to antibodies. Herein, we report the development of the Streptococcus pyogenes anti-CRISPR/Cas9 protein, AcrIIA4, as a novel affinity reagent. An engineered cysteine linker enables covalent immobilization of AcrIIA4 onto glassy carbon electrodes functionalized via aryl diazonium chemistry for detection of CRISPR/Cas9 RNP by electrochemical, fluorescent, and colorimetric methods. Electrochemical measurements achieve a detection of 280 pM RNP in reaction buffer and 8 nM RNP in biologically representative conditions. Our results demonstrate the ability of anti-CRISPR proteins to serve as robust, specific, flexible, and economical recognition elements in biosensing/quantification devices for CRISPR/Cas9 RNP.

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10 Results
10 Results