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Synthetic incoherent feedforward circuits show adaptation to the amount of their genetic template

  • Leonidas Bleris
  • , Zhen Xie
  • , David Glass
  • , Asa Adadey
  • , Eduardo Sontag
  • , Yaakov Benenson
  • University of Texas at Dallas
  • Massachusetts Institute of Technology
  • University of Maryland, Baltimore County
  • Rutgers - The State University of New Jersey, New Brunswick
  • ETH Zurich

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

147 Scopus citations

Abstract

Natural and synthetic biological networks must function reliably in the face of fluctuating stoichiometry of their molecular components. These fluctuations are caused in part by changes in relative expression efficiency and the DNA template amount of the network-coding genes. Gene product levels could potentially be decoupled from these changes via built-in adaptation mechanisms, thereby boosting network reliability. Here, we show that a mechanism based on an incoherent feedforward motif enables adaptive gene expression in mammalian cells. We modeled, synthesized, and tested transcriptional and post-transcriptional incoherent loops and found that in all cases the gene product adapts to changes in DNA template abundance. We also observed that the post-transcriptional form results in superior adaptation behavior, higher absolute expression levels, and lower intrinsic fluctuations. Our results support a previously hypothesized endogenous role in gene dosage compensation for such motifs and suggest that their incorporation in synthetic networks will improve their robustness and reliability.

Original languageEnglish
Article number519
JournalMolecular Systems Biology
Volume7
DOIs
StatePublished - 2011

Keywords

  • feedforward motifs
  • gene dosage and noise
  • mammalian cells
  • microRNAs
  • negative autoregulation

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