Browsing by Author "Haseloff, Jim"
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- ItemArtificial Symmetry-Breaking for Morphogenetic Engineering Bacterial Colonies(2017) Núñez Quijada, Isaac Natán; Matute Torres, Tamara Francisca; Del Valle, Ilenne D.; Kan, Anton; Choksi, Atri; Endy, Drew; Haseloff, Jim; Rudge, Timothy; Federici, FernánMorphogenetic engineering is an emerging field that explores the design and implementation of self-organized patterns, morphologies, and architectures in systems composed of multiple agents such as cells and swarm robots. Synthetic biology, on the other hand, aims to develop tools and formalisms that increase reproducibility, tractability, and efficiency in the engineering of biological systems. We seek to apply synthetic biology approaches to the engineering of morphologies in multicellular systems. Here, we describe the engineering of two mechanisms, symmetry-breaking and domain-specific cell regulation, as elementary functions for the prototyping of morphogenetic instructions in bacterial colonies. The former represents an artificial patterning mechanism based on plasmid segregation while the latter plays the role of artificial cell differentiation by spatial colocalization of ubiquitous and segregated components. This separation of patterning from actuation facilitates the design-build-test-improve engineering cycle. We created computational modules for CellModeller representing these basic functions and used it to guide the design process and explore the design space in silico. We applied these tools to encode spatially structured functions such as metabolic complementation, RNAPT7 gene expression, and CRISPRi/Cas9 regulation. Finally, as a proof of concept, we used CRISPRi/Cas technology to regulate cell growth by controlling methionine synthesis. These mechanisms start from single cells enabling the study of morphogenetic principles and the engineering of novel population scale structures from the bottom up.
- ItemIntercellular adhesion promotes clonal mixing in growing bacterial populations(2018) Kan, Anton; Del Valle, Ilenne; Rudge, Timothy; Federici, Fernán; Haseloff, Jim
- ItemLoop assembly: a simple and open system for recursive fabrication of DNA circuit(2019) Pollak, Bernardo; Cerda, Ariel; Delmans, Mihails; Álamos, Simón; Moyano, Tomás; West, Anthony; Gutiérrez, Rodrigo A.; Patron, Nicola J.; Federici, Fernán; Haseloff, JimHigh-efficiency methods for DNA assembly have enabled the routine assembly of syntheticDNAs of increased size and complexity. However, these techniques require customization,elaborate vector sets or serial manipulations for the different stages of assembly. We have developed Loop assembly based on a recursive approach to DNA fabrication. Thesystem makes use of two Type IIS restriction endonucleases and corresponding vector sets forefficient and parallel assembly of large DNA circuits. Standardized level 0 parts can be assem-bled into circuits containing 1, 4, 16 or more genes by looping between the two vector sets.The vectors also contain modular sites for hybrid assembly using sequence overlap methods. Loop assembly enables efficient and versatile DNA fabrication for plant transformation. Weshow the construction of plasmids up to 16 genes and 38 kb with high efficiency (> 80%).We have characterized Loop assembly on over 200 different DNA constructs and validatedthe fidelity of the method by high-throughput Illumina plasmid sequencing. Our method provides a simple generalized solution for DNA construction with standardizedparts. The cloning system is provided under an OpenMTA license for unrestricted sharing andopen access.