Registry in a tube: multiplexed pools of retrievable parts for genetic design space exploration.

Nucleic Acids Res
Authors
Abstract

Genetic designs can consist of dozens of genes and hundreds of genetic parts. After evaluating a design, it is desirable to implement changes without the cost and burden of starting the construction process from scratch. Here, we report a two-step process where a large design space is divided into deep pools of composite parts, from which individuals are retrieved and assembled to build a final construct. The pools are built via multiplexed assembly and sequenced using next-generation sequencing. Each pool consists of ∼20 Mb of up to 5000 unique and sequence-verified composite parts that are barcoded for retrieval by PCR. This approach is applied to a 16-gene nitrogen fixation pathway, which is broken into pools containing a total of 55 848 composite parts (71.0 Mb). The pools encompass an enormous design space (10(43) possible 23 kb constructs), from which an algorithm-guided 192-member 4.5 Mb library is built. Next, all 10(30) possible genetic circuits based on 10 repressors (NOR/NOT gates) are encoded in pools where each repressor is fused to all permutations of input promoters. These demonstrate that multiplexing can be applied to encompass entire design spaces from which individuals can be accessed and evaluated.

Year of Publication
2016
Journal
Nucleic Acids Res
Date Published
2016 Dec 21
ISSN
1362-4962
DOI
10.1093/nar/gkw1226
PubMed ID
28007941
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