A Computer Inside a Cell
ScienceNOW
28 March 2013 | Robert F. Service

Enlarge Image

Turn on. A computer simulation of the expected result from a
biological AND gate (top) and the actual data (bottom).
Credit: J.Bonnet et al., Science (28 March, 2013)

For the first time, synthetic biologists have created a genetic device
that mimics one of the widgets on which all of modern electronics is
based, the three-terminal transistor. Like standard electronic
transistors, the new biological transistor is expected to work in many
different biological circuit designs. Together with other advances in
crafting genetic circuitry, that should make it easier for scientists
to program cells to do everything from monitor pollutants and the
progression of disease to turning on the output of medicines and
biofuels.

Researchers have already made impressive strides over the last decade
in mimicking the behavior of electronic circuitry using DNA, RNA, and
proteins. But often these devices tend to work only in the precise
setting for which they were designed, such as turning up the
expression of one particular gene in response to detecting a specific
input signal.

Drew Endy, a synthetic biologist at Stanford University in Palo Alto,
California, and his colleagues have been looking for an approach that
could be more broadly applicable, in the same manner that an
electronic transistor can be wired into numerous different circuit
patterns to carry out myriad different functions. So they decided to
use biology to mimic the most common type of electronic transistor. A
transistor is essentially an electronic switch with three terminals or
electrodes. A relatively small input of electrons flowing into a
control electrode, called the gate, opens an electronic doorway,
allowing a larger electrical current to flow between two other
electrodes, known as the source and drain. This signal amplification
can feed numerous downstream transistors enabling further logical
operations to occur. Endy and his colleagues reasoned that
amplification could help future genetic circuitry designs as well,
because biological signals often quickly die out as weak molecular
signals often get swamped by other molecular "noise" inside a cell.

At the heart of the new biological transistors, which Endy's team
calls "transcriptor," are three components: an engineered DNA strand;
RNA polymerase (RNA-P), an enzyme that travels along DNA and copies it
into RNA; and proteins called integrases that are capable of cutting
and pasting DNA. The DNA acts like a wire, Endy says. But instead of
controlling how electrons flow down the wire, the team uses the
integrases (the gate) to control how many molecules of RNA-P (the
electrons) travel down the DNA strand, they report online today in
Science.

To do so, in the middle of the DNA strand, they place a short DNA
snippet called a "terminator" that kicks RNA-P molecules off the DNA.
The key is that the terminator kicks off RNA-P only when RNA-P is
traveling in one direction; say from left to right, but not from right
to left. The Stanford team then uses the integrators to cut out the
terminator DNA snippet that's in the middle of the longer DNA strand,
turn it around, and then reinsert it. That means as the RNA-P travels
down the DNA strand from left to right, it no longer recognizes the
terminator. So it stays attached to the DNA and continues its
transcription to RNA. Thus, the signal is turned on. In this case, if
the RNA-Ps make it to the end point, they transcribe the gene for
green fluorescent protein, lighting up the cell. Flip the terminator
again and the RNA-P is kicked off, and the light turns off.

The Stanford team then showed that they could line up multiple
transcriptors to carry out logical functions, creating standard
logical circuits called AND gates, OR gates, XOR gates, and so on,
which combine signals according to certain rules. (A computer's
processor is a vast assemblage of such gates.) They also showed that
their novel biological circuit designs were adept at producing signals
with large amplification and that they could be used to up the
expression of a variety of genes, such as the production of
fluorescent signals that made it simple to detect cells that were
carrying out their programming.

The Stanford team isn't the first to use integrases, DNA, and RNA-P to
build circuitry. In February, a team led by synthetic biologist
Timothy Lu of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology in Cambridge
reported in Nature Biotechnology that they had used a similar strategy
to carry out complex cellular logic and memory functions. But Lu says
that "Drew's paper is really exciting" because it demonstrates that
the strategy can be used to amplify signals. That could be helpful in
designing novel cellular circuitry to detect small molecular signals
that might indicate the presence of a disease and create a large
output signal that can be easily detected.

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