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| Funder | Biotechnology and Biological Sciences Research Council |
|---|---|
| Recipient Organization | University College London |
| Country | United Kingdom |
| Start Date | Mar 31, 2022 |
| End Date | Mar 30, 2027 |
| Duration | 1,825 days |
| Number of Grantees | 5 |
| Roles | Co-Investigator; Principal Investigator |
| Data Source | UKRI Gateway to Research |
| Grant ID | BB/W003538/1 |
All cellular life uses a universal genetic code that provides the informational link between genes and their protein outputs. The code has 64 codons to enable 20 amino acids to be assembled into proteins, with between 1 and 6 codons per amino acid. But the assignment of the codons has remained essentially unchanged despite over three billion years of evolution.
This raises several fundamental questions: i) is the genetic code the product of early optimisation, or a 'frozen accident' with other arrangements of the codon table equally viable? Theoretical analyses suggest that the code is optimised to minimise errors, but alternative arrangements have not been tested experimentally. ii) Can the code be expanded to include other amino acids that are not currently found in proteins (so called ncAAs) through the reassignment of one or more codons?
To-date, such engineering has been achieved only to a limited degree. iii) Could industrial biotechnology exploit cells with a rearranged and expanded code to make ncAA-containing proteins with novel features (e.g. hormone drugs with longer half-lives, or enzymes with new catalytic functions)? iv) Could such recoding address issues and public concerns around escape and horizontal transfer of synthetic genes given that they would use a code that is unreadable by any other organism?
The creation of 'genome recoded organisms' represents an extremely challenging endeavour, even when considering a 'simple' cell such as E. coli. In this project we will reduce the complexity of this challenge by focussing on the chloroplast (or 'plastid'). Whilst algal and plant cells have most of their genes in the nucleus, their plastids possess a self-contained genetic system with a tiny genome of only a hundred-or-so genes known as the plastome.
Recent advances in synthetic biology and genetic engineering using the single-cell alga Chlamydomonas now offer the potential for genome recoding, expansion, and exploitation using this model system.
In this project we bring together a consortium of leading experts in the fields of chloroplast synthetic biology, genome recoding and ncAAs, plant synthetic biology, and algal genetic engineering and gene editing. We will undertake an ambitious programme of work with five main goals:
1. We will generate a synthetic plastome (SynPlast1.0) in which all non-essential genes have been removed and the remaining genes use a minimal set of 51 codons. This will demonstrate the principle of codon compression and also serve as the basis for redesign of the system.
2. Having establish the pipeline for plastome design and delivery, we will reassign codons to different amino acids to make SynPlast2.0. We will then assess the 'fitness' of cells containing this new genetic code in terms of the biology of the cell and its plastid.
3. We will extend the genetic code to include ncAAs by making use of the spare codons released in step 1. We will demonstrate that multiple ncAAs can be added to the code, and that proteins with novel properties can be synthesised.
4. In order to develop the engineered plastid as a sub-cellular factory, we need to precisely control plastome gene expression. We will develop genetic switches in the nucleus that allow the tuneable expression of plastid genes.
5. We will exploit the fact that the alga is photosynthetic to test different re-engineering strategies for improving photosynthesis. We will then use the collective knowledge from the project to demonstrate the light-driven synthesis of two pharmaceutical proteins, incorporating ncAAs that have previously been shown to confer valuable new therapeutic properties. This will allow future technology where such proteins are made simply, cheaply and sustainably using CO2 and sunlight.
University of Edinburgh; MRC Laboratory of Molecular Biology; University of Cambridge; University College London
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