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NEWS
INDEX
Archives
2005
April
Researchers improve design
of genetic on-off switches
Jim Barlow,
Life Sciences Editor
217-333-5802; jebarlow@uiuc.edu
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Click
photo to enlarge |
| Photo
by Jim Barlow |
| Huimin
Zhao is a professor in the department of chemical
and biomolecular engineering and member of the Institute
for Genomic Biology at Illinois. |
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4/7/05
CHAMPAIGN, Ill. —
Researchers at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign have set
a new standard in the design and engineering of nuclear hormone receptor-based
genetic on-off switches, without causing new problems or aggravating
existing ones.
The new technique, published online ahead of regular publication by
the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, combines the advantages
of directed evolution and computationally driven rational design, said
Huimin Zhao, a professor in the department of chemical
and biomolecular engineering and member of the Institute
for Genomic Biology at Illinois.
Zhao’s team, using yeast and mammalian cells, altered the specificity
of human estrogen receptor alpha by 100 million times so it would bind
preferentially to a non-toxic synthetic molecule (4,4’-dihydroxybenzil)
over the natural estrogen 17-beta-estradiol.
Such selectivity moves researchers closer to designing synthetic molecules
that will attach to only targeted receptors to activate or deactivate
desired gene expression in living systems, which could lead to advances
in such applications as gene therapy, metabolic engineering, functional
genomics, enzyme engineering and animal disease model studies.
Many previous attempts, using a variety of molecular methods, have involved
time-consuming approaches that have resulted in unintended activity
when non-targeted receptors have responded to the new molecules.
“I’m not saying that we have solved the problem, but we
have shown that our approach can be very efficient and done successfully,”
said Zhao, also an affiliate in the chemistry
and bioengineering departments
and member of the Center
for Biophysics and Computational Biology. “We were able to
alter the ligand (molecule) selectively by 10 to the 8th in mammalian
cells. No one has had this high level of success.”
The Illinois approach, Zhao said, is more general, quicker to accomplish
and more accurate than a scientifically hailed combinational approach
published in PNAS last October by researchers at the Georgia Institute
of Technology. In their paper, the Georgia scientists used random mutagenesis
and chemical complementation to develop a yeast-based system that made
a retinoid X receptor, a nuclear hormone receptor, recognize and bind
to a synthetic molecule.
The protein-engineering approach used by Zhao’s team used directed
evolution, which mimics natural evolution in a test tube, to force rapid
evolution of human estrogen receptor with new ligand specificity. This
process is done mainly through stepwise, site-saturation mutagenesis
and high throughput screening. The sites of human estrogen receptor
chosen for saturation mutagenesis were identified through rational design,
which involves computational modeling and biochemical and genetic studies
to predict the interactions between the receptor and the ligand and
the myriad molecular interactions that take place to drive gene expression.
The engineered genetic changes subsequently make the receptor highly
sensitive to the synthetic molecule that is introduced.
“We envision that the described technology could provide a powerful,
broadly applicable tool for engineering receptors/enzymes with improved
or novel ligand/substrate specificity,” Zhao said.
Co-authors with Zhao were Karuppiah Chockalingam and Zhilei Chen, both
doctoral students in chemical and biomolecular engineering, and John
A. Katzenellenbogen, a Swanlund Endowed Chair in chemistry and affiliate
of the Beckman Institute of Advanced
Science and Technology at Illinois.
A patent is being sought for the protein-engineering technology and
gene switch.
A National Science Foundation Faculty Early Career Development Award
grant to Zhao funded the research.
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