Abstract

In previous work, we have developed a DNA methylation-based epigenetic memory system that operates in Escherichia coli to detect environmental signals, trigger a phenotypic switch of the cells and store the information in DNA methylation. The system is based on the CcrM DNA methyltransferase and a synthetic zinc finger (ZnF4), which binds DNA in a CcrM methylation-dependent manner and functions as a repressor for a ccrM gene expressed together with an egfp reporter gene. Here, we developed a reversible reset for this memory system by adding an increased concentration of ZnSO4 to the bacterial cultivation medium and demonstrate that one bacterial culture could be reversibly switched ON and OFF in several cycles. We show that a previously developed differential equationmodel of the memory system can also describe the new data. Then, we studied the long-term stability of the ON-state of the system over approximately 100 cell divisions showing a gradual loss of ON-state signal starting after 4 days of cultivation that is caused by individual cells switching from an ON- into the OFF-state. Over time, the methylation of the ZnF4-binding sites is not fully maintained leading to an increased OFF switching probability of cells, because stronger binding of ZnF4 to partially demethylated operator sites leads to further reductions in the cellular concentrations of CcrM. These data will support future design to further stabilize the ON-state and enforce the binary switching behaviour of the system. Together with the development of a reversible OFF switch, our new findings strongly increase the capabilities of bacterial epigenetic biosensors.

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