MicroRNA-Based Single-Gene Circuits Buffer Protein
Synthesis Rates against Perturbations
Posted on 2014-05-16 - 00:00
Achieving
precise control of mammalian transgene expression has
remained a long-standing, and increasingly urgent, challenge in biomedical
science. Despite much work, single-cell methods have consistently
revealed that mammalian gene expression levels remain susceptible
to fluctuations (noise) and external perturbations. Here, we show
that precise control of protein synthesis can be realized using a
single-gene microRNA (miRNA)-based feed-forward loop (sgFFL). This
minimal autoregulatory gene circuit consists of an intronic miRNA
that targets its own transcript. In response to a step-like increase
in transcription rate, the network generated a transient protein expression
pulse before returning to a lower steady state level, thus exhibiting
adaptation. Critically, the steady state protein levels were independent
of the size of the stimulus, demonstrating that this simple network
architecture effectively buffered protein production against changes
in transcription. The single-gene network architecture was also effective
in buffering against transcriptional noise, leading to reduced cell-to-cell
variability in protein synthesis. Noise was up to 5-fold lower for
a sgFFL than for an unregulated control gene with equal mean protein
levels. The noise buffering capability varied predictably with the
strength of the miRNA-target interaction. Together, these results
suggest that the sgFFL single-gene motif provides a general and broadly
applicable platform for robust gene expression in synthetic and natural
gene circuits.
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Strovas, Timothy
J.; Rosenberg, Alexander B.; Kuypers, Brianna
E.; Muscat, Richard A.; Seelig, Georg (2016). MicroRNA-Based Single-Gene Circuits Buffer Protein
Synthesis Rates against Perturbations. ACS Publications. Collection. https://doi.org/10.1021/sb4001867