Composite
FKBP-yEGFP

Part:BBa_K2601008

Designed by: Yang Jianzhao   Group: iGEM18_Peking   (2018-10-08)
Revision as of 12:51, 15 October 2018 by LebronJames (Talk | contribs)


FKBP-yEGFP

Introduction

A widespread use of rapamycin, an anti-fungal antibiotic, has been developed to take advantage of the small molecule’s ability to heterodimerize proteins. Rapamycin binds to the FK506 binding protein (FKBP) as well as to a 100-amino acid domain of the mammalian target of rapamycin (mTOR), known as the FKBP-rapamycin binding domain (Frb). Proteins of interest can be expressed as fusions to FKBP or Frb, and then conditionally dimerized by adding rapamycin.

Figure 1.Structure of FKBP-Frb interaction induced by rapamycin.

Design

Some membrane-less organelles, such as stress granules and P bodies, have been discovered in recent years. Proteins condense into droplets and assemble these organelles through a process called phase separation. Physically, phase separation is the transformation of a one-phase thermodynamic system to a multi phase system, much like how oil and water demix from each other. According to thermodynamics, molecules will diffuse down the gradient of chemical potential instead of concentration. This is exactly why proteins will self organize into granules, diffusing from regions of low concentration to regions of high concentration. Here is an illustration of phase separation in cells.

T--Peking--phase separation demo1.png T--Peking--arrowhead.pngT--Peking--phase separation demo2.png

In order to rationally design a synthetic organelle based on protein phase separation, we need a multivalent module and a protein-protein interaction module. The paired FKBP and Frb is one of the bioparts that we chose to introduce protein-protein interaction. FKBP and Frb can dimerize upon adding rapamycin. As for the multivalent module, we turned to de novo-designed homo-oligomeric short peptides. These short peptides are called HO-Tags (homo-oligomeric tags). HOTags contain approximately 30 amino acids. HOTags have high stoichiometry, forming hexamer or tetrameric spontaneously. The hexameric HOTag3, together with the tetrameric HOTag6, can robustly drive protein phase separation upon protein interaction (achieved by FKBP-Frb module). We named our system SPOT(Synthetic Phase separation-based Organelle Platform) because it can form granules (fluorescent spots) in yeast. To verify the feasibility of the system, we fused two fluorescence proteins with the two components of synthetic organelles. Thus, we can observe the self-organization of components and the formation of organelles under fluorescence microscope. Here is a demonstration of our overall design.

Figure 2.The overall design of the synthetic organelle with florescence reporters. Based on the principle of multivalence and interaction, we fused FKBP-Frb module with homo-oligomeric tags (HOtags) to form synthetic organelle.

Properties

The interaction between FKBP and rapamycin has been well characterized (Kd ≈ 0.2 nM), and early experiments suggest that formation of a ternary complex including FRB is quite favorable (Kd ≈ 2.5 nM). FKBP and FRB do not interact in the absence of rapamycin. Our results confirm that FKBP/Frb module fused with HOTags can drive phase separation in yeast.

Figure 3.
Figure 3.

turn to the thermodynamic model of our system. Phase separation is easy to take place in the green area, where the system is unstable, while it can also happen in the blue area, where the system is metastable. Whether chi one three is equal to chi two three decides whether the diagram is symmetric. This is a useful instruction for our experiments. To some extends it can save us from some unnecessary trials. Here are the kinetic simulation results. We can see the larger chi is, the sooner the system relaxes into equilibrium state, which means the faster the phase separation appears.


T--Peking--promoter-strength.png T--Peking--FKBP-Frb-promoter.png T--Peking--thermo-model.png
Figure 4.


T--Peking--rap0.gif T--Peking--rap100.gif T--Peking--rap1000.gif T--Peking--rap1000.gif
Figure 4.
Figure 3.


Sequence and Features


Assembly Compatibility:
  • 10
    COMPATIBLE WITH RFC[10]
  • 12
    COMPATIBLE WITH RFC[12]
  • 21
    INCOMPATIBLE WITH RFC[21]
    Illegal BglII site found at 337
    Illegal BamHI site found at 358
  • 23
    COMPATIBLE WITH RFC[23]
  • 25
    INCOMPATIBLE WITH RFC[25]
    Illegal AgeI site found at 79
  • 1000
    INCOMPATIBLE WITH RFC[1000]
    Illegal BsaI.rc site found at 1004


[edit]
Categories
//cds
//chassis/eukaryote/yeast
//proteindomain/binding
Parameters
biologySaccharomyces cerevisiae