Medical College of Wisconsin
CTSICores SearchResearch InformaticsREDCap

An orthogonalized PYR1-based CID module with reprogrammable ligand-binding specificity. Nat Chem Biol 2024 Jan;20(1):103-110

Date

10/24/2023

Pubmed ID

37872402

Pubmed Central ID

PMC10746540

DOI

10.1038/s41589-023-01447-7

Scopus ID

2-s2.0-85174576715 (requires institutional sign-in at Scopus site)   4 Citations

Abstract

Plants sense abscisic acid (ABA) using chemical-induced dimerization (CID) modules, including the receptor PYR1 and HAB1, a phosphatase inhibited by ligand-activated PYR1. This system is unique because of the relative ease with which ligand recognition can be reprogrammed. To expand the PYR1 system, we designed an orthogonal '*' module, which harbors a dimer interface salt bridge; X-ray crystallographic, biochemical and in vivo analyses confirm its orthogonality. We used this module to create PYR1*MANDI/HAB1* and PYR1*AZIN/HAB1*, which possess nanomolar sensitivities to their activating ligands mandipropamid and azinphos-ethyl. Experiments in Arabidopsis thaliana and Saccharomyces cerevisiae demonstrate the sensitive detection of banned organophosphate contaminants using living biosensors and the construction of multi-input/output genetic circuits. Our new modules enable ligand-programmable multi-channel CID systems for plant and eukaryotic synthetic biology that can empower new plant-based and microbe-based sensing modalities.

Author List

Park SY, Qiu J, Wei S, Peterson FC, Beltrán J, Medina-Cucurella AV, Vaidya AS, Xing Z, Volkman BF, Nusinow DA, Whitehead TA, Wheeldon I, Cutler SR

Author

Brian F. Volkman PhD Professor in the Biochemistry department at Medical College of Wisconsin




MESH terms used to index this publication - Major topics in bold

Abscisic Acid
Arabidopsis
Arabidopsis Proteins
Dimerization
Ligands
Membrane Transport Proteins