Letters to Nature

Nature 403, 339-342 (20 January 2000) | doi:10.1038/35002131; Received 15 September 1999; Accepted 23 November 1999

Construction of a genetic toggle switch in Escherichia coli

Timothy S. Gardner1,2, Charles R. Cantor1 & James J. Collins1,2

  1. Department of Biomedical Engineering,
  2. Center for BioDynamics and
  3. Center for Advanced Biotechnology, Boston University, 44 Cummington Street, Boston, Massachusetts 02215, USA

Correspondence to: James J. Collins1,2 Correspondence and requests for materials should be addressed to J.J.C. (e-mail: Email: jcollins@bu.edu). Plasmid sequences are available at http://cbd.bu.edu/abl/toggle.

It has been proposed1 that gene-regulatory circuits with virtually any desired property can be constructed from networks of simple regulatory elements. These properties, which include multistability and oscillations, have been found in specialized gene circuits such as the bacteriophage lambda switch2 and the Cyanobacteria circadian oscillator3. However, these behaviours have not been demonstrated in networks of non-specialized regulatory components. Here we present the construction of a genetic toggle switch—a synthetic, bistable gene-regulatory network—in Escherichia coli and provide a simple theory that predicts the conditions necessary for bistability. The toggle is constructed from any two repressible promoters arranged in a mutually inhibitory network. It is flipped between stable states using transient chemical or thermal induction and exhibits a nearly ideal switching threshold. As a practical device, the toggle switch forms a synthetic, addressable cellular memory unit and has implications for biotechnology, biocomputing and gene therapy.

Extra navigation

.

Open Innovation Challenges

naturejobs

ADVERTISEMENT