Multiplexing cell-cell communication
Multiplexing cell-cell communication
Abstract The engineering of advanced multicellular behaviors, such as the programmed growth of biofilms or tissues, requires cells to communicate multiple aspects of physiological information. Unfortunately, few cell-cell communication systems have been developed for synthetic biology. Here, we engineer a genetically-encoded channel selector device that enables a single communication system to transmit two separate intercellular conversations. Our design comprises multiplexer and demultiplexer sub-circuits constructed from a total of 12 CRISPRi-based transcriptional logic gates, an acyl homoserine lactone-based communication module, and three inducible promoters that enable small molecule control over the conversations. Experimentally-parameterized mathematical models of the sub-components predict the steady state and dynamical performance of the full system. Multiplexed cell-cell communication has applications in synthetic development, metabolic engineering, and other areas requiring the coordination of multiple pathways amongst a community of cells. One Sentence SummaryWe have engineered a synthetic genetic system that enables bacteria to have two separate conversations over a single chemical “wire” by separating the conversations in time.
Sexton John T.、Tabor Jeffrey J.
Department of Bioengineering, Rice UniversityDepartment of Bioengineering, Rice University||Department of BioSciences, Rice University
生物工程学分子生物学细胞生物学
Sexton John T.,Tabor Jeffrey J..Multiplexing cell-cell communication[EB/OL].(2025-03-28)[2025-05-29].https://www.biorxiv.org/content/10.1101/584664.点此复制
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