Abstract
Model-based design of biological parts is a critical goal of synthetic biology, especially for eukaryotes. Here we demonstrate that nucleosome architecture can have a role in defining yeast promoter activity and utilize a computationally-guided approach that can enable both the redesign of endogenous promoter sequences and the de novo design of synthetic promoters. Initially, we use our approach to reprogram native promoters for increased expression and evaluate their performance in various genetic contexts. Increases in expression ranging from 1.5- to nearly 6-fold in a plasmid-based system and up to 16-fold in a genomic context were obtained. Next, we demonstrate that, in a single design cycle, it is possible to create functional, purely synthetic yeast promoters that achieve substantial expression levels (within the top sixth percentile among native yeast promoters). In doing so, this work establishes a unique DNA-level specification of promoter activity and demonstrates predictive design of synthetic parts.
Similar content being viewed by others
Introduction
Synthetic biology design is ultimately constrained by our capacity to specify function of synthetic parts at the DNA sequence level. This capacity would redirect the field away from relying on a ‘parts-off-the-shelf’ strategy and toward an approach marked by pure, synthetic design and customizable specification. Toward this end, great strides have been made to enable model-based design of cellular behaviour1 and to allow for rational design of small sequences (such as ribosome binding sites, transcription factors and enhancers)2,3,4,5,6,7,8. Yet, pure de novo design of full promoters, one of the most fundamental components in synthetic circuits, remains difficult, especially in eukaryotic model organisms like yeast. Traditional approaches spanning the last decade of promoter engineering efforts8 rely upon part-mining9, mutagenesis strategies10,11,12 and/or chimeric design6,7 to identify promoter variants. More recently, data-driven rules have been developed to describe promoters as a first step toward comprehensive models13.
In contrast, here we present the first approach for DNA-level specification of promoter activity on the basis of predicted nucleosome affinity. Previous studies have demonstrated both the importance of chromatin structure in promoter strength14 as well as the capacity to alter transcription rates by modifying nucleosome binding sequences13. Following these studies, our overall hypothesis is that promoter activity can be predicted and controlled based on nucleosome architecture (Fig. 1). To test this hypothesis, we made use of a previously-developed hidden Markov model to de novo predict nucleosome occupancy along an arbitrary DNA sequence15. This hidden Markov model has been validated in another study15 and was found to be predictive of nucleosome position. By coupling this developed model along with our hypothesis, our approach can enable both the redesign of endogenous promoter sequences as well as the de novo design of synthetic promoters in a single design cycle.
Results
Rational redesign of native yeast promoters
Our earliest efforts in yeast promoter engineering10,11 relied upon large-scale mutagenesis and selection to generate a TEF1 promoter library. This process clearly demonstrated that distributed point mutations in promoters can alter expression levels—although in most cases, lower expression than wild-type is obtained. Here, we sought to extract a design principle from this 15-member promoter library that collectively spans a 15-fold dynamic range in expression and encompasses between 5 and 71 mutations across 401 base pairs. By evaluating predicted nucleosome affinity across the 15-member TEF1 promoter library, we found that the cumulative sum of predicted nucleosome affinity across the entire promoter (hereafter referred to as the ‘cumulative affinity score’) is inversely proportional to promoter strength in a very robust, predictable manner, despite the great diversity of sequence and transcription factor binding site mutations (Fig. 2a,b). This strong correlation underpins the potential for nucleosome architecture to be used generically as a design principle for promoter engineering in yeast.
Using these results along with a computational exploration of sequence space, we established a framework to specify increased promoter strength at the DNA level by designing sequences with decreased predicted nucleosome affinity. Although this study focused on predictive increases in promoter activity, this approach may also be used more generally to decrease or otherwise tune promoter strength. Our nucleosome affinity minimization technique employed a greedy algorithm to minimize the cumulative affinity score over several rounds of optimization; in each round, all possible candidates differing by a single base pair were computationally generated and the candidate with the smallest cumulative affinity score was used as an input for the next round. Importantly, this optimization was bounded by the sequence-based requirement to avoid the destruction or creation of well-known transcription factor binding sites16,17 (Supplementary Software). A greedy algorithm was chosen for computational convenience rather than for exhaustive nucleosome occupancy optimization. Moreover, we have validated this choice by finding that optimizing over all pairs of nucleotide substitutions in each round resulted in promoters with only slightly lower predicted nucleosome affinity although at a substantially increased computational cost (700 s per mutation versus 218,000 s per pair of mutations in the case of CYC1; Supplementary Fig. 1). Thus, the greedy algorithm is well-suited for the rapid identification of designer promoter sequences. As each round of the greedy algorithm evaluated all candidates differing by single base pair changes (a space on the order of 103 for each promoter tested), and because our design cycle consisted of 50–100 rounds, this proof-of-concept demonstration corresponds to sequence space searches of upwards of 105 in a facile manner. It should be emphasized that the searched space is small compared with the total available sequence space for a promoter of this length (10156). The greedy algorithm chosen in this work is one way in which to computationally parse this large sequence landscape. The scope of this sequence space for the first round of the CYC1 promoter optimization is depicted in Fig. 3. This initial search illustrates hot-spots in sequence space that result in lower cumulative nucleosome affinity scores. For example, in Fig. 3a, there are a series of variants clustered near the −100 base pair position that show decreased cumulative nucleosome affinity scores when mutated to T, and higher scores when mutated to G or C. Furthermore, it should be noted there are examples where changing a particular nucleotide to an A or T does not result in the lowest predicted score for that position even though AT-rich regions are generally less likely to bind nucleosomes.
Using this approach, we successfully defined promoter sequences that experimentally increased the strength of four different native yeast promoters (CYC1, HIS5, HXT7 and TEF1) that natively span an order of magnitude in expression level (Fig. 4a, Supplementary Figs 2–7 compare wild-type promoter strengths and predicted nucleosome affinity profiles). In each of these cases, we used our approach to computationally redesign sequences for higher strength promoter variants by choosing the products of select rounds of optimization to synthesize, and then experimentally demonstrating improved transcriptional activity in a plasmid-based system. Furthermore, using the CYC1 promoter as a test case, we showed that a variety of expression levels can be generated by synthesizing the products of varying rounds of optimization, with CYC1v1 the product of an early round and CYC1v3 the product of a late round (Supplementary Table 1 contains full promoter sequences). The greatest improvement in strength over wild-type for all of the redesigned promoters was 3.2-fold, exhibited by the CYC1v3 promoter, which is the result of the 30th round of optimization. Subsequent measurement of transcript level using quantitative PCR confirmed that the redesigned promoters increased transcriptional expression over each corresponding wild-type promoter (Fig. 4b).
It should be noted that nucleosome architecture did not appear to be as limiting among the absolute strongest native promoters in yeast (including TDH3 and GAL1). While our previous work has demonstrated that these promoters have the capacity for increased expression through the use of chimeric hybrid promoters7, no increase in expression was seen in this work (Supplementary Fig. 8), indicating that nucleosome architecture is likely evolutionarily optimized for these promoters. These two promoters represented the only cases in which false positives were identified by this algorithm. However, a nucleosome architecture approach could still likely be used to tune down the expression of these highest strength promoters.
To confirm the biological underpinning of this design algorithm, nucleosome occupancy was measured via micrococcal nuclease digestion and quantitative PCR tiling array. This experiment demonstrated that nucleosome occupancy was reduced in CYC1v3 relative to wild-type CYC1, as predicted by the model (Fig. 5). These results clearly demonstrate that actual nucleosome occupancy was reduced in the redesigned promoter (Fig. 5a). These results can be compared qualitatively with the computational predictions generated by the hidden Markov model, and complement previous work validating the predictive ability of the hidden Markov model15 (Fig 5b,c). Collectively, these results confirmed our hypothesis that promoter strength may be controlled by manipulating nucleosome occupancy and demonstrated that nucleosome architecture can be used to specify sequence-function relationships for yeast promoters.
Redesigned promoters function in multiple genetic contexts
All of the above-described characterization was performed within a singular genetic context, namely a single plasmid design. Thus, we next sought to test the capacity for rationally designed promoters to function in alternative genetic contexts. Specifically, alternative contexts can be used to test the ability of the predicted changes to potentiate nucleosome architecture rearrangements independent of upstream and downstream DNA segments. Differences in the genetic contexts that surround the promoter, either due to the promoter’s location in the genome or due to the particular gene being expressed, could result in changes to the local chromosomal architecture and could therefore influence the final expression level of the promoter. This phenomenon of genetic loci-dependent expression is well-documented for the yeast genome18.
First, the CYC1 series of redesigned promoters was evaluated with an alternative reporter gene. In this case, the yECitrine gene used in our previous experiments was replaced with a beta-galactosidase gene from Escherichia coli (LacZ). Beta-galactosidase activity was detected and the relative increase in expression level using this reporter was similar to that from the yECitrine constructs (Fig. 6a). In this case, CYC1v3 had a 3.8-fold higher relative expression compared with wild-type CYC1.
Second, the CYC1 series of redesigned promoters was evaluated in a genomic context. In this case, the Kluyveromyces lactis URA3 gene was cloned upstream of each CYC1 promoter variant as a marker gene, and the entire cassette was integrated into the TRP1 locus in the genome of Saccharomyces cerevisiae BY4741. Expression of yECitrine was measured using flow cytometry (Fig. 6b). The trend and rank order of increased expression level along this series was the same as for the plasmids (both for yECitrine and LacZ). However, the relative fold-change in expression level was significantly higher for the integrated constructs than for the plasmids, with the highest increase from wild-type being 16-fold for CYC1v3. To determine whether this difference was due to the move from the plasmid to the genome or due to the presence of the URA3 marker gene integrated upstream of the promoter, a set of plasmids containing the URA3 marker gene were also assayed for yECitrine expression (Fig. 6c). Interestingly, the fold-change in expression level for these constructs was intermediate between the original plasmid constructs and the integrated constructs, with the highest increase being 5.9-fold for CYC1v3. It is therefore likely that both the addition of the marker gene and the integration of the cassette resulted in local repositioning of nucelosomes that changed the final ultimate nucleosome architecture of the expression cassette. Regardless, the redesigned promoters consistently increased expression level and maintained the same rank order, indicating that these rational changes are able to potentiate a decrease in the nucleosome occupancy of yeast promoters in a variety of genetic contexts, thereby increasing expression level in a general manner.
Design and creation of synthetic yeast promoters
As a second proof of concept, we sought to demonstrate that a model-guided approach can be used to create de novo promoters for synthetic biology without requiring the use of a native promoter as a scaffold. Previous attempts to create synthetic S. cerevisiae promoters usually relied upon hybrids of multiple promoter parts7, synthetic zinc finger transcription factor binding sites inserted into a scaffold of a native promoter4,5, the use of synthetic TALE transcription factors19 or random libraries and screening20. A purely synthetic, de novo designed promoter created merely upon the arrangement of desired transcription factors has not been previously demonstrated. Specifically, our goal in this proof of concept was to demonstrate that, even without explicit information related to promoter architecture rules, it is possible to computationally specify active promoter sequences. To use our design and search strategy to create such a synthetic promoter, we specified two arrangements as initial lead scaffolds for the promoter design. Specifically, we utilized common glycolytic transcription factor binding sites embedded in random spacer sequences as the lead designs for our algorithm (Fig. 7a, Supplementary Table 2 compares scaffolds to native promoters). This approach resulted in two synthetic base scaffolds: Psynth1, and a shorter version Psynth2, which were both used as inputs to our nucleosome affinity minimization technique. Three synthetic promoters were designed for Psynth1 and Psynth2: one version from the sixth round of optimization, a second version from the 50 or 30th round and a third version from the 98 or 59th round, respectively. As a result, a total search space of 105 was evaluated over the entire design cycle for each base scaffold. The result was six DNA-specified promoters that were subsequently characterized. All six designs were found to be active promoters in vivo (Fig. 7b) that span nearly a 20-fold dynamic range with most of them being similar or higher in strength to the CYC1 promoter—a promoter representative of the mean expression level of native yeast promoters21. The power of our affinity minimization technique to increase promoter activity is especially evident in the case of Psynth1. Psynth1v1 is only marginally higher in expression than the negative control, whereas Psynth1v2 is 3.5-fold higher and approaches the strength of CYC1. Psynth1v3 is nearly 20-fold higher than Psynth1v1 and is on par with the strength of a commonly used promoter, the HXT7 promoter. Moreover, the substantial transcriptional capacity of this purely synthetic promoter places it in the sixth percentile of expression when compared with endogenous yeast promoters21. Furthermore, it should be noted that each of these synthetic promoters is quite distinct on a sequence level from native S. cerevisiae promoters. In fact, the most significant homology consisted of a 39 base pair sequence surrounding the TATA box of Psynth1 (E-value =0.48). Thus, our Psynth promoters are not enriched with native sequences and are therefore pure, de novo synthetic designs. Moreover, these de novo designed promoters did not require native spacing between transcription factors nor did they require the need to exactly mimic any given native promoter sequence as a scaffold.
Discussion
Taken together, these results present the first DNA-level specification of promoter strength for yeast promoters on the basis of a nucleosome architecture model. We have demonstrated the potential of this approach for (1) the redesign of endogenous promoter scaffolds and (2) the design of de novo synthetic promoters.
Specifically, native yeast promoters were redesigned into highly homologous sequences with promoter strengths up to 16-fold higher than their wild-type sequences. For each of the four promoter case studies, we improved activity by first interrogating ~\n105 promoter variants in silico (103 candidates were queried per round when searching over all possible single base pair changes, and 106 could be queried per round when searching over doubles, see Fig. 3), and then characterizing the products of selected rounds of the greedy algorithm in vivo. For the case of the CYC1 promoter, we chose the products of three different rounds of optimization to synthesize. This approach stands in stark contrast to the generation of large mutagenic libraries followed by screening. The extent of expression level increase did not always correlate with the absolute number of base pairs changed, as increases obtained in TEF1v1 required only five rounds of optimization (Supplementary Table 1 contains full sequences). However, the utility of the greedy algorithm to sequentially identify increasingly optimal sequences was upheld for each case tested. Nevertheless, a more comprehensive, computational search of this sequence space may be used in place of the greedy algorithm to parse this complex landscape. Regardless, each of the redesigned promoters required multiple rounds (that is, base pair changes) to significantly increase expression, underscoring that these specific high-strength-potentiating combinations would be undetectable in random mutant libraries. In addition, we confirmed that these improvements were indeed due to decreased nucleosome occupancy in the case of the CYC1v3 promoter. Finally, we showed that these rationally designed promoters consistently display increased expression in a variety of genetic contexts, demonstrating that these directed changes are able to potentiate a decrease in nucleosome occupancy despite variation in the surrounding chromosomal architecture.
Further, we created several fully synthetic yeast promoters which attain a variety of strengths and have minimal homology to any native sequence. The base promoter scaffolds for these synthetic promoters were only very loosely based on the native glycolytic promoters in yeast, demonstrating that close homology to native promoters may not be necessary for synthetic eukaryotic promoters. Given this surprising result, the range of synthetic promoter design possibilities is unbounded by traditional promoter architecture design rules inferred from native promoter structures. Furthermore, one of our synthetic promoters, Psynth1v3, is on par with a commonly used promoter for metabolic engineering purposes, the HXT7 promoter, and resides among the top six percent of native yeast promoters with regard to strength21.
This work confirms that nucleosome occupancy is an important causative factor limiting the strength of native yeast promoters and is likely an evolutionary mechanism for controlling transcriptional strength22. This method significantly advances the state-of-the-art in a field currently entrained in mutation and chimeric library construction by enabling the predictable specification of synthetic parts in single design-build-test cycles rather than by the generation of large libraries. Thus, this method opens the door to the rational design and creation of synthetic eukaryotic promoters as well as expands our capacity for pure synthetic biology design.
Methods
Computational methods
Nucleosome occupancy of native yeast promoters was optimized through the use of a computational algorithm. First, transcription factor binding sites present in the wild-type sequence were manually identified through the use of the Yeast Promoter Atlas16. Then, nucleotides outside these sites were systematically perturbed using a custom MATLAB script, which utilized a FORTRAN implementation of the Nucleosome Positioning Prediction (NuPoP) engine15 to predict nucleosome affinity. Minor modifications to NuPoP were made to enable the acceptance of command-line inputs. The cumulative sum of nucleosome affinities over each candidate was then computed and the nucleotide substitution resulting in the largest decrease in total nucleosome affinity was saved as the product of one round of optimization. This sequence was then systematically perturbed as above so that successive increases in promoter strength were achieved in an iterative fashion. This MATLAB script additionally avoided the creation of new transcription factor binding sites17 and also restricted promoter designs to those which could be synthesized as gBlocks by Integrated DNA Technologies, Inc. (Coralville, Iowa) which was the vendor chosen to provide the synthetic DNA in this project.
The identity and placement of transcription factor binding sites in the synthetic promoter scaffolds were determined using a bioinformatics analysis of glycolytic promoters as a guide. The occurrence and relative positions of common transcription factor binding sites were catalogued and the average spacing values were calculated (Supplementary Table 2). In addition to a consensus TATA box, four transcription factor binding sites were included in the upstream activating sequence area of the synthetic promoter: a Reb1p binding site, a Rap1p binding site and two Gcr1p binding sites. Consensus binding site sequences were used17. Psynth1 was designed using the average lengths between binding sites and Psynth2 was identical, except that the minimum length of the two longest regions (between the GCR1p binding site and the TATA box and between the TATA box and the transcription start site) was used instead of the average length in an attempt to make a shorter promoter. The TDH3 transcription start site and 5′ UTR was used for both synthetic promoters to prevent any confounding issues from having different 5′ UTR structures between promoters. Once the binding sites and relative positions were chosen, this information was then used as input to a custom MATLAB script to generate the Psynth series of vectors. First, the undetermined nucleotides between each transcription factor binding site were randomly seeded at a GC content of 35%. Once any inadvertent transcription factor binding sites generated in these regions were removed, nucleosome affinity was reduced in an iterative fashion as above. As before, the creation of new transcription factor binding sites or sequences which could not be synthesized was avoided. All computations were performed on an Intel Core 2 Duo processor running Windows 7.
Strains and media
S. cerevisiae strains BY4741 (MAT a; his3Δ1; leu2Δ0; met15Δ0; ura3Δ0) and BY4741 ΔPCYC1 (MAT a; his3Δ1; leu2Δ0; met15Δ0; ura3Δ0; PCYC1::ura3) were used in this study. BY4741 ΔPCYC1 was generated using the ‘delete and repeat’ knockout method23 with the K. lactis URA3 gene from plasmid PUG72 as the selectable marker. Primers for the generation of the knockout cassette are in Supplementary Table 3. Integration of the CYC1 promoter variants and yECitrine cassettes was completed by cloning the K. lactis URA3 gene upstream of each CYC1 promoter variant cassette (see below for plasmid construction) and then using the ‘delete and repeat’ method to integrate both genes into the TRP1 locus. See Supplementary Table 3 for primers. Yeast strains were propagated at 30 °C in yeast complete synthetic medium (CSM). CSM is composed of 6.7 g l−1 yeast nitrogen base, 20 g l−1 glucose and either CSM-HIS or CSM-URA supplement (MP Biomedicals, Solon, OH), depending on the required auxotrophic selection. E. coli strain DH10B was used for all cloning and plasmid propagation. DH10B was grown at 37 °C in Luria-Bertani (LB) media supplemented with 50 μg ml−1 of ampicillin. All strains were cultivated with 225 r.p.m. orbital shaking. Yeast and bacterial strains were stored at −80 °C in 15% glycerol.
Plasmid construction
All plasmids used in this study were based on the p413 yeast shuttle vectors24. These plasmids contain the HIS3 gene as the auxotrophic marker. The TEF1 and CYC1 promoters were available in the parent plasmid set. The TEF1 mutant series of promoters and the yECitrine and LacZ genes were cloned via PCR from plasmids10,11,23,25. The HXT7 and HIS5 promoters were cloned via PCR from extracted BY4741 gDNA obtained using the Wizard Genomic DNA Extraction Kit from Promega (Madison, WI). Redesigned and synthetic promoters were ordered as gBlock fragments from Integrated DNA Technologies, Inc. (Coralville, IA) and then cloned via PCR (Supplementary Table 1 for promoter sequences and Supplementary Table 3 for all primer sequences). Standard cloning and bacterial transformations were performed according to Sambrook and Russell26. PCR reactions used Phusion High-Fidelity DNA Polymerase from New England Biolabs (Ipswich, MA) and followed supplier instructions; primers were purchased from Integrated DNA Technologies. Antarctic phosphatase and all restriction enzymes were purchased from New England Biolabs. Fermentas T4 DNA ligase and all other enzymes and chemicals were purchased through Thermo Fisher Scientific (Waltham, MA). Vectors were isolated using the Zyppy Plasmid Miniprep kit from Zymo Research Corp. (Irvine, CA) and DNA purification was performed with a Qiaquick PCR Cleanup kit (Qiagen, Valencia, CA). Plasmids were transformed using the EZ Yeast Transformation II Kit from Zymo Research Corp. according to manufacturer’s instructions.
Flow cytometry
Fluorescence from strains expressing the yECitrine gene was measured using a FACS Fortessa (BD Biosciences) in biological triplicate. Cells were grown for 16 h to mid-log phase from a starting OD600=0.005. For each strain, 10,000 events were collected using a YFP fluorochrome with a voltage of 355. Day-to-day voltage variability was mitigated by measuring all comparable strains on the same day. FlowJo (Tree Star Inc., Ashland, OR) was used to analyse data. For plasmids expressing yECitrine, positive YFP expression (as compared with strains expressing a control plasmid with no yECitrine) was gated, and mean fluorescence values were calculated across the biological triplicates. For genome-integrated expression of yECitrine near autofluorescence values, mean fluorescence was calculated first, then the mean autofluorescence value (as measured from strains not expressing yECitrine) was subtracted.
Beta-galactosidase assay
Strains expressing the LacZ gene were evaluated for beta-galactosidase activity through the chemiluminescent Gal-Screen system (Applied Biosystems). Yeast cultures were grown for 16 h to mid-log phase from a starting OD600=0.005. Before the assay, cultures were diluted with fresh media to approximately OD600=0.01–0.07. OD600 was measured, and then cultures were treated with Gal-Screen Reaction Buffer according to the manufacturer’s instructions. Luminescence was quantified using a Mithras LB 940 luminometer (Berthold Technologies). Day-to-day variation was avoided by measuring all samples on the same day. The average luminescence across biological replicates was calculated.
Quantitative PCR
To measure mRNA levels resulting from redesigned promoters, quantitative PCR was performed. Yeast cultures were grown for 16 hours to mid-log phase from a starting OD600=0.005, and RNA was extracted using Zymolyase digestion of the yeast cell wall followed by the Quick-RNA MiniPrep kit according to manufacturer’s instructions (Zymo Research Corp.). cDNA was generated from the purified RNA via the High Capacity cDNA Reverse Transcription Kit (Applied Biosystems). Primers for qPCR were designed using the PrimerQuest tool and obtained from Integrated DNA Technologies (Supplementary Table 3 for primers). Quantitative PCR was performed on a ViiA7 qPCR system (Life Technologies) using SYBR Green Master Mix from Roche (Penzberg, Germany), following the manufacturer’s instructions with an annealing temperature of 58 °C and 0.25 μl of cDNA product per 20 μl reaction. The ALG9 gene was used as a housekeeping gene, and the relative yECitrine transcript level was obtained by calculating the average values between three technical replicates for each sample.
Nucleosome mapping
Nucleosome position and density was mapped in the CYC1 and CYC1v3 promoters. The BY4741 ΔPCYC1 strain was used for this part of the study to prevent contaminating genomic sequence from confounding the results. Plasmids p413-CYC1-yECitrine and p413-CYC1v3-yECitrine were independently transformed into the strain as described above. Mono-nucleosome sized genomic DNA fragments were then isolated from each strain27. To conduct these measurements, 200 ml of culture was grown to approximately OD600=0.8. Cells were treated with 1% formaldehyde for 30 min at 30 °C. The reaction was stopped by adding glycine to a final concentration of 125 mM and cells were centrifuged at 3,000 g and washed twice in 20 ml of PBS. Cells were then resuspended in 20 ml Zymolyase buffer (1 M sorbitol, 50 mM Tris pH 7.4, 10 mM 2-mercaptoethanol), then spheroplasted with 50 U Zymolyase (Zymo Research Corp.) for 40 min at 30 °C. Cells were then washed once with 10 ml Zymolyase buffer and resuspended in 2 ml NP Buffer (1 M sorbitol, 50 mM NaCl, 10 mM Tris pH 7.4, 5 mM MgCl2, 0.075% NP 40, 1 mM 2-mercaptoethanol, 500 μM spermidine). Aliquots of 500 μl were split between four tubes for each sample, and CaCl2 was added to a final concentration of 3 mM. Micrococcal nuclease (New England Biolabs) digestions were performed at concentrations ranging from 100–600 U ml−1 for 10 min at 37 °C. Reactions were stopped by adding 100 μl stop buffer (5% SDS, 500 mM EDTA). Proteinase K (New England Biolabs) was added to each tube at a final concentration of 100 mg ml−1 and incubated at 65 °C for approximately 8 h. DNA was purified using phenol-chloroform-isoamyl alcohol (25:24:1) extraction and ethanol precipitation. Resuspended DNA was treated with DNase-free RNase (Promega) for 30 min at 37 °C, then re-extracted using phenol-chloroform-isoamyl alcohol and ethanol precipitation. DNA was resuspended in 50 μl water and run in a 2% agarose gel. The dilution with the most apparent mono-nucleosome sized band (approximately 150 bp) was extracted using the Invitrogen Pure-Link gel extraction kit (Life Technologies, Carlsbad, CA).
A tiling array of primer sets was designed for each promoter14 to perform quantitative PCR. To accomplish this, primers were designed using the PrimerQuest tool and obtained from Integrated DNA Technologies (Supplementary Table 4 for primers) and were placed approximately 50–100 base pairs apart. Quantitative PCR was performed as described above using 0.5 μl of mono-nucleosome DNA extract (at 10 ng μl−1) per 10 μl reaction. A section of the ampicillin gene on each plasmid was used as a control to account for any variation in total plasmid copy number between the two samples. Standard curves were created for each primer set using a serial dilution of the corresponding whole plasmid with concentration varying from 5 × 107 to 5 × 103 copies per μl. The relative copy number for each primer set in the promoter was calculated using these standard curves and comparing with the ampicillin primer set.
Additional information
How to cite this article: Curran, K. A. et al. Design of synthetic yeast promoters via tuning of nucleosome architecture. Nat. Commun. 5:4002 doi: 10.1038/ncomms5002 (2014).
References
Crook, N. & Alper, H. S. Model-based design of synthetic, biological systems. Chem. Eng. Sci. 103, 2–11 (2013).
Salis, H. M., Mirsky, E. A. & Voigt, C. A. Automated design of synthetic ribosome binding sites to control protein expression. Nat. Biotechnol. 27, 946–950 (2009).
Amit, R., Garcia, H. G., Phillips, R. & Fraser, S. E. Building enhancers from the ground up: a synthetic biology approach. Cell 146, 105–118 (2011).
Khalil, Ahmad S. et al. A synthetic biology framework for programming eukaryotic transcription functions. Cell 150, 647–658 (2012).
McIsaac, R. S. et al. Synthetic gene expression perturbation systems with rapid, tunable, single-gene specificity in yeast. Nucleic Acids Res. 41, e57 (2013).
Blazeck, J., Liu, L., Redden, H. & Alper, H. Tuning gene expression in Yarrowia lipolytica by a hybrid promoter approach. Appl. Environ. Microbiol. 77, 7905–7914 (2011).
Blazeck, J., Garg, R., Reed, B. & Alper, H. S. Controlling promoter strength and regulation in Saccharomyces cerevisiae using synthetic hybrid promoters. Biotechnol. Bioeng. 109, 2884–2895 (2012).
Blazeck, J. & Alper, H. S. Promoter engineering: recent advances in controlling transcription at the most fundamental level. Biotechnol. J. 8, 46–58 (2013).
Zaslaver, A. et al. A comprehensive library of fluorescent transcriptional reporters for Escherichia coli. Nat. Methods 3, 623–628 (2006).
Alper, H., Fischer, C., Nevoigt, E. & Stephanopoulos, G. Tuning genetic control through promoter engineering. Proc. Natl Acad. Sci. USA 102, 12678–12683 (2005).
Nevoigt, E. et al. Engineering of promoter replacement cassettes for fine-tuning of gene expression in Saccharomyces cerevisiae. Appl. Environ. Microbiol. 72, 5266–5273 (2006).
Du, J., Yuan, Y., Si, T., Lian, J. & Zhao, H. Customized optimization of metabolic pathways by combinatorial transcriptional engineering. Nucleic Acids Res. 40, e142 (2012).
Sharon, E. et al. Inferring gene regulatory logic from high-throughput measurements of thousands of systematically designed promoters. Nat. Biotechnol. 30, 521–530 (2012).
Lam, F. H., Steger, D. J. & O’Shea, E. K. Chromatin decouples promoter threshold from dynamic range. Nature 453, 246–250 (2008).
Xi, L. et al. Predicting nucleosome positioning using a duration Hidden Markov Model. BMC Bioinformatics 11, 346 (2010).
Chang, D.T.-H., Huang, C.-Y., Wu, C.-Y. & Wu, W.-S. YPA: an integrated repository of promoter features in Saccharomyces cerevisiae. Nucleic Acids Res. 39, D647–D652 (2011).
Abdulrehman, D. et al. YEASTRACT: providing a programmatic access to curated transcriptional regulatory associations in Saccharomyces cerevisiae through a web services interface. Nucleic Acids Res. 39, D136–D140 (2011).
Bai Flagfeldt, D., Siewers, V., Huang, L. & Nielsen, J. Characterization of chromosomal integration sites for heterologous gene expression in Saccharomyces cerevisiae. Yeast 26, 545–551 (2009).
Blount, B. A., Weenink, T., Vasylechko, S. & Ellis, T. Rational diversification of a promoter providing fine-tuned expression and orthogonal regulation for synthetic biology. PLoS ONE 7, e33279 (2012).
Jeppsson, M., Johansson, B., Jensen, P. R., Hahn-Hagerdal, B. & Gorwa-Grauslund, M. F. The level of glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase activity strongly influences xylose fermentation and inhibitor sensitivity in recombinant Saccharomyces cerevisiae strains. Yeast 20, 1263–1272 (2003).
Holstege, F. C. P. et al. Dissecting the regulatory circuitry of a eukaryotic genome. Cell 95, 717–728 (1998).
Swamy, K. B., Chu, W. Y., Wang, C. Y., Tsai, H. K. & Wang, D. Evidence of association between nucleosome occupancy and the evolution of transcription factor binding sites in yeast. BMC Evol. Biol. 11, 150 (2011).
Hegemann, J. H. & Heick, S. B. Delete and repeat: A comprehensive toolkit for sequential gene knockout in the budding yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae. Methods Mol. Biol. 765, 189–206 (2011).
Mumberg, D., Muller, R. & Funk, M. Yeast vectors for the controlled expression of heterologous proteins in different genetic backgrounds. Gene 156, 119–122 (1995).
Crook, N. C., Freeman, E. S. & Alper, H. S. Re-engineering multicloning sites for function and convenience. Nucleic Acids Res. 39, (2011).
Sambrook, J. & Russell, D. W. Molecular Cloning: A Laboratory Manual Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory Press, Cold Spring Harbor (2001).
Shivaswamy, S. et al. Dynamic remodeling of individual nucleosomes across a eukaryotic genome in response to transcriptional perturbation. PLoS Biol. 6, e65 (2008).
Acknowledgements
This work was funded by National Science Foundation Graduate Research Fellowships to K.A.C. and N.C.C. and by the National Institutes of Health (grant number R01GM090221). The content is solely the responsibility of the authors and does not necessarily reflect the official views of the National Institute of General Medical Sciences or the National Institutes of Health. Dr Vishwanath Iyer and Dia Bagchi graciously provided the protocol and helpful advice for the micrococcal nuclease assay.
Author information
Authors and Affiliations
Contributions
K.A.C., N.C.C. and H.S.A. conceived and designed the experiments. N.C.C. performed the computational work. K.A.C., A.S.K., A.G. and A.M.W. performed the experimental work. K.A.C., N.C.C. and H.S.A. wrote the manuscript.
Corresponding author
Ethics declarations
Competing interests
The authors declare no competing financial interests.
Supplementary information
Supplementary Information
Supplementary Figures 1-8, Supplementary Tables 1-4 and Supplementary Reference (PDF 513 kb)
Supplementary Software
Promoter Redesign Software (ZIP 23 kb)
Rights and permissions
About this article
Cite this article
Curran, K., Crook, N., Karim, A. et al. Design of synthetic yeast promoters via tuning of nucleosome architecture. Nat Commun 5, 4002 (2014). https://doi.org/10.1038/ncomms5002
Received:
Accepted:
Published:
DOI: https://doi.org/10.1038/ncomms5002
This article is cited by
-
Stepwise genetic modification for efficient expression of heterologous proteins in Aspergillus nidulans
Applied Microbiology and Biotechnology (2023)
-
The current situations and limitations of genetic engineering in cyanobacteria: a mini review
Molecular Biology Reports (2023)
-
Engineering yeast artificial core promoter with designated base motifs
Microbial Cell Factories (2020)
-
Genetic circuit design automation for yeast
Nature Microbiology (2020)
-
Automated design of thousands of nonrepetitive parts for engineering stable genetic systems
Nature Biotechnology (2020)