Abstract

Plant synthetic biology aims to harness the natural abilities of plants and to turn them to new purposes. A primary goal of plant synthetic biology is to produce predictable and programmable genetic circuits from simple regulatory elements and well-characterized genetic components. The number of available DNA parts for plants is increasing, and the methods for rapid quantitative characterization are being developed, but the field of plant synthetic biology is still in its early stages. We here describe methods used to describe the quantitative properties of genetic components needed for plant synthetic biology. Once the quantitative properties and transfer function of a variety of genetic parts are known, computers can select the optimal components to assemble into functional devices, such as toggle switches and positive feedback circuits. However, while the variety of circuits and traits that can be put into plants are limitless, doing synthetic biology in plants poses unique challenges. Plants are composed of differentiated cells and tissues, each representing potentially unique regulatory or developmental contexts to introduced synthetic genetic circuits. Further, plants have evolved to be highly sensitive to environmental influences, such as light or temperature, any of which can affect the quantitative function of individual parts or whole circuits. Measuring the function of plant components within the context of a plant cell and, ideally, in a living plant, will be essential to using these components in gene circuits with predictable function. Mathematical modeling will be needed to account for the variety of contexts a genetic part will experience in different plant tissues or environments. With such understanding in hand, it may be possible to redesign plant traits to serve human and environmental needs.

Highlights

  • Plants are an attractive platform for engineered traits because of their advanced ability to adapt to their environments, variety of growth forms, and natural ability to produce useful secondary compounds

  • The output of one part becomes the input for the so the dynamic ranges of the two parts must overlap in order for the second part to be activated. These simulations form the basis for mathematical modeling of circuit function and contribute to the iterative “design-buildtest” workflow that is at the heart of synthetic biology

  • A mutual repressor-based toggle switch comprised of transcriptionactivator-like effector (TALE) DNA binding domains has been reported in mammalian cells (Lebar et al, 2014), but was found not to display bistability

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Summary

Quantitative and Predictive Genetic Parts for Plant Synthetic Biology

Quantitative and Predictive Genetic Parts for Plant Synthetic Biology. We here describe methods used to describe the quantitative properties of genetic components needed for plant synthetic biology. Once the quantitative properties and transfer function of a variety of genetic parts are known, computers can select the optimal components to assemble into functional devices, such as toggle switches and positive feedback circuits. Mathematical modeling will be needed to account for the variety of contexts a genetic part will experience in different plant tissues or environments. With such understanding in hand, it may be possible to redesign plant traits to serve human and environmental needs

INTRODUCTION
Parts for Plant Synthetic Biology
CONSIDERATIONS FOR SELECTING PARTS
Parts Libraries for Plants
Computational Protein Design
Quantitative Characterization
Transfer Functions
Circuit Assembly
PLANT SYNTHETIC BIOLOGY APPLICATIONS
Toggle Switches
Positive Feedback Circuits
CONCLUSION
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