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Traumatic brain injury (TBI), a neurological condition that negatively affects neural capabilities, occurs when a blunt trauma impacts the head. Following the initial injury that immediately impacts neural cell function and survival, a series of secondary injury events lead to substantial sustained inflammation for weeks to years post-injury. To develop TBI treatments that may stimulate regenerative processes, a novel drug delivery system that efficiently delivers the appropriate drug/payload to injured tissue is crucial. Hyaluronic acid (HA) hydrogels are attractive when developing a biomaterial for tissue reparation and regeneration. HA is a natural polymer with physicochemical properties that can be tuned to match the properties of the extracellular matrix (ECM) of the many tissues including the central nervous system (CNS). Here, the project objective was to develop a HA hydrogel system for local delivery of a biological payload; this objective was completed by employing a composite system with two parts. The first part is an injectable, shear-thinning bulk hydrogel, and the second is microgels for loading biological payloads. The bulk hydrogel was composed of cyclodextrin modified HA (Cd-HA) and adamantane modified HA (Ad-HA) that give rise to guest-host interactions that facilitate physical crosslinking. The microgel, composed of norbornene-HA (Nor-HA) and sulfated-HA, crosslink via chemical crosslinks upon activation of a UV photoinitiator. The sulfated-HA microgels facilitate loading of biological payloads by mimicking heparin binding sites via the conjugated sulfated group. Neuregulin I, an epidermal growth factor with neuroprotective properties, is one such protein with a heparin binding domain that may be retained in the sulfated-HA microgels. Specifically, the project focused on mechanical testing of this composite microgel/hydrogel system and also developing protein affinity assays.
My work characterizes how two different classes of tools behave in new contexts and explores methods to improve their functionality: 1. CRISPR/Cas9 in human cells and 2. quorum sensing networks in Escherichia coli.
1. The genome-editing tool CRISPR/Cas9 has facilitated easily targeted, effective, high throughput genome editing. However, Cas9 is a bacterially derived protein and its behavior in the complex microenvironment of the eukaryotic nucleus is not well understood. Using transgenic human cell lines, I found that gene-silencing heterochromatin impacts Cas9’s ability to bind and cut DNA in a site-specific manner and I investigated ways to improve CRISPR/Cas9 function in heterochromatin.
2. Bacteria use quorum sensing to monitor population density and regulate group behaviors such as virulence, motility, and biofilm formation. Homoserine lactone (HSL) quorum sensing networks are of particular interest to synthetic biologists because they can function as “wires” to connect multiple genetic circuits. However, only four of these networks have been widely implemented in engineered systems. I selected ten quorum sensing networks based on their HSL production profiles and confirmed their functionality in E. coli, significantly expanding the quorum sensing toolset available to synthetic biologists.
complex therapy-oriented networks over the past fifteen years. This advancement has
greatly facilitated expansion of the emerging field of synthetic biology. Multistability is a
mechanism that cells use to achieve a discrete number of mutually exclusive states in
response to environmental inputs. However, complex contextual connections of gene
regulatory networks in natural settings often impede the experimental establishment of
the function and dynamics of each specific gene network.
In this work, diverse synthetic gene networks are rationally designed and
constructed using well-characterized biological components to approach the cell fate
determination and state transition dynamics in multistable systems. Results show that
unimodality and bimodality and trimodality can be achieved through manipulation of the
signal and promoter crosstalk in quorum-sensing systems, which enables bacterial cells to
communicate with each other.
Moreover, a synthetic quadrastable circuit is also built and experimentally
demonstrated to have four stable steady states. Experiments, guided by mathematical
modeling predictions, reveal that sequential inductions generate distinct cell fates by
changing the landscape in sequence and hence navigating cells to different final states.
Circuit function depends on the specific protein expression levels in the circuit.
We then establish a protein expression predictor taking into account adjacent
transcriptional regions’ features through construction of ~120 synthetic gene circuits
(operons) in Escherichia coli. The predictor’s utility is further demonstrated in evaluating genes’ relative expression levels in construction of logic gates and tuning gene expressions and nonlinear dynamics of bistable gene networks.
These combined results illustrate applications of synthetic gene networks to
understand the cell fate determination and state transition dynamics in multistable
systems. A protein-expression predictor is also developed to evaluate and tune circuit
dynamics.