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Description
Recombinases are powerful tools for genome engineering and synthetic biology, however recombinases are limited by a lack of user-programmability and often require complex directed-evolution experiments to retarget specificity. Conversely, CRISPR systems have extreme versatility yet can induce off-target mutations and karyotypic destabilization. To address these constraints we developed an RNA-guided

Recombinases are powerful tools for genome engineering and synthetic biology, however recombinases are limited by a lack of user-programmability and often require complex directed-evolution experiments to retarget specificity. Conversely, CRISPR systems have extreme versatility yet can induce off-target mutations and karyotypic destabilization. To address these constraints we developed an RNA-guided recombinase protein by fusing a hyperactive mutant resolvase from transposon TN3 to catalytically inactive Cas9. We validated recombinase-Cas9 (rCas9) function in model eukaryote Saccharomyces cerevisiae using a chromosomally integrated fluorescent reporter. Moreover, we demonstrated cooperative targeting by CRISPR RNAs at spacings of 22 or 40bps is necessary for directing recombination. Using PCR and Sanger sequencing, we confirmed rCas9 targets DNA recombination. With further development we envision rCas9 becoming useful in the development of RNA-programmed genetic circuitry as well as high-specificity genome engineering.
ContributorsStandage-Beier, Kylie S (Author) / Wang, Xiao (Thesis advisor) / Brafman, David A (Committee member) / Tian, Xiao-jun (Committee member) / Arizona State University (Publisher)
Created2018
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Description
Synthetic biology is an emerging field which melds genetics, molecular biology, network theory, and mathematical systems to understand, build, and predict gene network behavior. As an engineering discipline, developing a mathematical understanding of the genetic circuits being studied is of fundamental importance. In this dissertation, mathematical concepts for understanding, predicting,

Synthetic biology is an emerging field which melds genetics, molecular biology, network theory, and mathematical systems to understand, build, and predict gene network behavior. As an engineering discipline, developing a mathematical understanding of the genetic circuits being studied is of fundamental importance. In this dissertation, mathematical concepts for understanding, predicting, and controlling gene transcriptional networks are presented and applied to two synthetic gene network contexts. First, this engineering approach is used to improve the function of the guide ribonucleic acid (gRNA)-targeted, dCas9-regulated transcriptional cascades through analysis and targeted modification of the RNA transcript. In so doing, a fluorescent guide RNA (fgRNA) is developed to more clearly observe gRNA dynamics and aid design. It is shown that through careful optimization, RNA Polymerase II (Pol II) driven gRNA transcripts can be strong enough to exhibit measurable cascading behavior, previously only shown in RNA Polymerase III (Pol III) circuits. Second, inherent gene expression noise is used to achieve precise fractional differentiation of a population. Mathematical methods are employed to predict and understand the observed behavior, and metrics for analyzing and quantifying similar differentiation kinetics are presented. Through careful mathematical analysis and simulation, coupled with experimental data, two methods for achieving ratio control are presented, with the optimal schema for any application being dependent on the noisiness of the system under study. Together, these studies push the boundaries of gene network control, with potential applications in stem cell differentiation, therapeutics, and bio-production.
ContributorsMenn, David J (Author) / Wang, Xiao (Thesis advisor) / Kiani, Samira (Committee member) / Haynes, Karmella (Committee member) / Nielsen, David (Committee member) / Marshall, Pamela (Committee member) / Arizona State University (Publisher)
Created2018
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Description
Currently in synthetic biology only the Las, Lux, and Rhl quorum sensing pathways have been adapted for broad engineering use. Quorum sensing allows a means of cell to cell communication in which a designated sender cell produces quorum sensing molecules that modify gene expression of a designated receiver cell. While

Currently in synthetic biology only the Las, Lux, and Rhl quorum sensing pathways have been adapted for broad engineering use. Quorum sensing allows a means of cell to cell communication in which a designated sender cell produces quorum sensing molecules that modify gene expression of a designated receiver cell. While useful, these three quorum sensing pathways exhibit a nontrivial level of crosstalk, hindering robust engineering and leading to unexpected effects in a given design. To address the lack of orthogonality among these three quorum sensing pathways, previous scientists have attempted to perform directed evolution on components of the quorum sensing pathway. While a powerful tool, directed evolution is limited by the subspace that is defined by the protein. For this reason, we take an evolutionary biology approach to identify new orthogonal quorum sensing networks and test these networks for cross-talk with currently-used networks. By charting characteristics of acyl homoserine lactone (AHL) molecules used across quorum sensing pathways in nature, we have identified favorable candidate pathways likely to display orthogonality. These include Aub, Bja, Bra, Cer, Esa, Las, Lux, Rhl, Rpa, and Sin, which we have begun constructing and testing. Our synthetic circuits express GFP in response to a quorum sensing molecule, allowing quantitative measurement of orthogonality between pairs. By determining orthogonal quorum sensing pairs, we hope to identify and adapt novel quorum sensing pathways for robust use in higher-order genetic circuits.
ContributorsMuller, Ryan (Author) / Haynes, Karmella (Thesis director) / Wang, Xiao (Committee member) / Barrett, The Honors College (Contributor) / School of Mathematical and Statistical Sciences (Contributor) / Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry (Contributor) / School of Life Sciences (Contributor)
Created2015-05
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Description
The ability to edit chromosomal regions is an important tool for the study of gene function and the ability to engineer synthetic gene networks. CRISPR-Cas systems, a bacterial RNA-guided immune system against foreign nucleic acids, have recently been engineered for a plethora of genome engineering and transcriptional regulation applications. Here

The ability to edit chromosomal regions is an important tool for the study of gene function and the ability to engineer synthetic gene networks. CRISPR-Cas systems, a bacterial RNA-guided immune system against foreign nucleic acids, have recently been engineered for a plethora of genome engineering and transcriptional regulation applications. Here we employ engineered variants of CRISPR systems in proof-of-principle experiments demonstrating the ability of CRISPR-Cas derived single-DNA-strand cutting enzymes (nickases) to direct host-cell genomic recombination. E.coli is generally regarded as a poorly recombinogenic host with double-stranded DNA breaks being highly lethal. However, CRISPR-guided nickase systems can be easily programmed to make very precise, non-lethal, incisions in genomic regions directing both single reporter gene and larger-scale recombination events deleting up to 36 genes. Genome integrated repetitive elements of variable sizes can be employed as sites for CRISPR induced recombination. We project that single-stranded based editing methodologies can be employed alongside preexisting genome engineering techniques to assist and expedite metabolic engineering and minimalized genome research.
ContributorsStandage-Beier, Kylie S (Author) / Wang, Xiao (Thesis director) / Haynes, Karmella (Committee member) / Barrett, The Honors College (Contributor) / School of Life Sciences (Contributor)
Created2014-05
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Description
Synthetic biology is a novel method that reengineers functional parts of natural genes of interest to build new biomolecular devices able to express as designed. There is increasing interest in synthetic biology due to wide potential applications in various fields such as clinics and fuel production. However, there are still

Synthetic biology is a novel method that reengineers functional parts of natural genes of interest to build new biomolecular devices able to express as designed. There is increasing interest in synthetic biology due to wide potential applications in various fields such as clinics and fuel production. However, there are still many challenges in synthetic biology. For example, many natural biological processes are poorly understood, and these could be more thoroughly studied through model synthetic gene networks. Additionally, since synthetic biology applications may have numerous design constraints, more inducer systems should be developed to satisfy different requirements for genetic design.

This thesis covers two topics. First, I attempt to generate stochastic resonance (SR) in a biological system. Synthetic bistable systems were chosen because the inducer range in which they exhibit bistability can satisfy one of the three requirements of SR: a weak periodic force is unable to make the transition between states happen. I synthesized several different bistable systems, including toggle switches and self-activators, to select systems matching another requirement: the system has a clear threshold between the two energy states. Their bistability was verified and characterized. At the same time, I attempted to figure out the third requirement for SR – an effective noise serving as the stochastic force – through one of the most widespread toggles, the mutual inhibition toggle, in both yeast and E. coli. A mathematic model for SR was written and adjusted.

Secondly, I began work on designing a new genetic system capable of responding to pulsed magnetic fields. The operators responding to pulsed magnetic stimuli in the rpoH promoter were extracted and reorganized. Different versions of the rpoH promoter were generated and tested, and their varying responsiveness to magnetic fields was recorded. In order to improve efficiency and produce better operators, a directed evolution method was applied with the help of a CRISPR-dCas9 nicking system. The best performing promoters thus far show a five-fold difference in gene expression between trials with and without the magnetic field.
ContributorsHu, Hao (Author) / Wang, Xiao (Thesis advisor) / Stabenfeldt, Sarah (Committee member) / Brafman, David (Committee member) / Arizona State University (Publisher)
Created2016
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Description
Alzheimer’s disease (AD), despite over a century of research, does not have a clearly defined pathogenesis for the sporadic form that makes up the majority of disease incidence. A variety of correlative risk factors have been identified, including the three isoforms of apolipoprotein E (ApoE), a cholesterol transport protein in

Alzheimer’s disease (AD), despite over a century of research, does not have a clearly defined pathogenesis for the sporadic form that makes up the majority of disease incidence. A variety of correlative risk factors have been identified, including the three isoforms of apolipoprotein E (ApoE), a cholesterol transport protein in the central nervous system. ApoE ε3 is the wild-type variant with no effect on risk. ApoE ε2, the protective and most rare variant, reduces risk of developing AD by 40%. ApoE ε4, the risk variant, increases risk by 3.2-fold and 14.9-fold for heterozygous and homozygous representation respectively. Study of these isoforms has been historically complex, but the advent of human induced pluripotent stem cells (hiPSC) provides the means for highly controlled, longitudinal in vitro study. The effect of ApoE variants can be further elucidated using this platform by generating isogenic hiPSC lines through precise genetic modification, the objective of this research. As the difference between alleles is determined by two cytosine-thymine polymorphisms, a specialized CRISPR/Cas9 system for direct base conversion was able to be successfully employed. The base conversion method for transitioning from the ε3 to ε2 allele was first verified using the HEK293 cell line as a model with delivery via electroporation. Following this verification, the transfection method was optimized using two hiPSC lines derived from ε4/ε4 patients, with a lipofection technique ultimately resulting in successful base conversion at the same site verified in the HEK293 model. Additional research performed included characterization of the pre-modification genotype with respect to likely off-target sites and methods of isolating clonal variants.
ContributorsLakers, Mary Frances (Author) / Brafman, David (Thesis advisor) / Haynes, Karmella (Committee member) / Wang, Xiao (Committee member) / Arizona State University (Publisher)
Created2017
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Description
The advent of CRISPR/Cas9 revolutionized the field of genetic engineering and gave rise to the development of new gene editing tools including prime editing. Prime editing is a versatile gene editing method that mediates precise insertions and deletions and can perform all 12 types of point mutations. In turn, prime

The advent of CRISPR/Cas9 revolutionized the field of genetic engineering and gave rise to the development of new gene editing tools including prime editing. Prime editing is a versatile gene editing method that mediates precise insertions and deletions and can perform all 12 types of point mutations. In turn, prime editing represents great promise in the design of new gene therapies and disease models where editing was previously not possible using current gene editing techniques. Despite advancements in genome modification technologies, parallel enrichment strategies of edited cells remain lagging behind in development. To this end, this project aimed to enhance prime editing using transient reporter for editing enrichment (TREE) technology to develop a method for the rapid generation of clonal isogenic cell lines for disease modeling. TREE uses an engineered BFP variant that upon a C-to-T conversion will convert to GFP after target modification. Using flow cytometry, this BFP-to-GFP conversion assay enables the isolation of edited cell populations via a fluorescent reporter of editing. Prime induced nucleotide engineering using a transient reporter for editing enrichment (PINE-TREE), pairs prime editing with TREE technology to efficiently enrich for prime edited cells. This investigation revealed PINE-TREE as an efficient editing and enrichment method compared to a conventional reporter of transfection (RoT) enrichment strategy. Here, PINE-TREE exhibited a significant increase in editing efficiencies of single nucleotide conversions, small insertions, and small deletions in multiple human cell types. Additionally, PINE-TREE demonstrated improved clonal cell editing efficiency in human induced pluripotent stem cells (hiPSCs). Most notably, PINE-TREE efficiently generated clonal isogenic hiPSCs harboring a mutation in the APOE gene for in vitro modeling of Alzheimer’s Disease. Collectively, results gathered from this study exhibited PINE-TREE as a valuable new tool in genetic engineering to accelerate the generation of clonal isogenic cell lines for applications in developmental biology, disease modeling, and drug screening.
ContributorsKostes, William Warner (Author) / Brafman, David (Thesis advisor) / Jacobs, Bertram (Committee member) / Lapinaite, Audrone (Committee member) / Tian, Xiaojun (Committee member) / Wang, Xiao (Committee member) / Arizona State University (Publisher)
Created2022
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Description
Clustered regularly interspace short palindromic repeats (CRISPR) and CRISPR associated (Cas) technologies have become integral to genome editing. Canonical CRISPR-Cas9 systems function as a ribonucleic acid (RNA)-guided nucleases. Single guide RNAs (sgRNA) can be easily designed to target Cas9’s nuclease activity towards protospacer deoxyribonucleic acid (DNA) sequences. The relatively ease

Clustered regularly interspace short palindromic repeats (CRISPR) and CRISPR associated (Cas) technologies have become integral to genome editing. Canonical CRISPR-Cas9 systems function as a ribonucleic acid (RNA)-guided nucleases. Single guide RNAs (sgRNA) can be easily designed to target Cas9’s nuclease activity towards protospacer deoxyribonucleic acid (DNA) sequences. The relatively ease and efficiency of CRISPR-Cas9 systems has enabled numerous technologies and DNA manipulations. Genome engineering in human cell lines is centered around the study of genetic contribution to disease phenotypes. However, canonical CRISPR-Cas9 systems are largely reliant on double stranded DNA breaks (DSBs). DSBs can induce unintended genomic changes including deletions and complex rearrangements. Likewise, DSBs can induce apoptosis and cell cycle arrest confounding applications of Cas9-based systems for disease modeling. Base editors are a novel class of nicking Cas9 engineered with a cytidine or adenosine deaminase. Base editors can install single letter DNA edits without DSBs. However, detecting single letter DNA edits is cumbersome, requiring onerous DNA isolation and sequencing, hampering experimental throughput. This document describes the creation of a fluorescent reporter system to detect Cytosine-to-Thymine (C-to-T) base editing. The fluorescent reporter utilizes an engineered blue fluorescent protein (BFP) that is converted to green fluorescent protein (GFP) upon targeted C-to-T conversion. The BFP-to-GFP conversion enables the creation of a strategy to isolate edited cell populations, termed Transient Reporter for Editing Enrichment (TREE). TREE increases the ease of optimizing base editor designs and assists in editing cell types recalcitrant to DNA editing. More recently, Prime editing has been demonstrated to introduce user defined DNA edits without the need for DSBs and donor DNA. Prime editing requires specialized prime editing guide RNAs (pegRNAs). pegRNAs are however difficult to manually design. This document describes the creation of a software tool: Prime Induced Nucleotide Engineering Creator of New Edits (PINE-CONE). PINE-CONE rapidly designs pegRNAs based off basic edit information and will assist with synthetic biology and biomedical research.
ContributorsStandage-Beier, Kylie S (Author) / Wang, Xiao (Thesis advisor) / Brafman, David A (Committee member) / Tian, Xiao-jun (Committee member) / Nielsen, David R (Committee member) / Arizona State University (Publisher)
Created2023
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Description
Alzheimer’s disease (AD) affects over 5 million individuals each year in the United States. Furthermore, most cases of AD are sporadic, making it extremely difficult to model and study in vitro. CRISPR/Cas9 and base editing technologies have been of recent interest because of their ability to create single nucleotide edits

Alzheimer’s disease (AD) affects over 5 million individuals each year in the United States. Furthermore, most cases of AD are sporadic, making it extremely difficult to model and study in vitro. CRISPR/Cas9 and base editing technologies have been of recent interest because of their ability to create single nucleotide edits at nearly any genomic sequence using a Cas9 protein and a guide RNA (sgRNA). Currently, there is no available phenotype to differentiate edited cells from unedited cells. Past research has employed fluorescent proteins bound to Cas9 proteins to attempt to enrich for edited cells, however, these methods are only reporters of transfection (RoT) and are no indicative of actual base-editing occurring. Thus, this study proposes a transient reporter for editing enrichment (TREE) and Cas9-mediated adenosine TREE (CasMasTREE) which use plasmids to co-transfect with CRISPR/Cas9 technologies to serve as an indicator of base-editing. Specifically, TREE features a blue fluorescent protein (BFP) mutant that, upon a C-T conversion, changes the emission spectrum to a green fluorescent protein (GFP). CasMasTREE features a mCherry and GFP protein separated by a stop codon which can be negated using an A-G conversion. By employing a sgRNA that targets one of the TREE plasmids and at least one genomic site, cells can be sorted for GFP(+) cells. Using these methods, base-edited isogenic hiPSC line generation using TREE (BIG-TREE) was created to generate isogenic hiPSC lines with AD-relevant edits. For example, BIG-TREE demonstrates the capability of converting Apolipoprotein E (APOE), a gene associated with AD-risk development, wildtype (3/3) into another isoform, APOE2/2, to create isogenic hiPSC lines. The capabilities of TREE are vast and can be applied to generate various models of diseases with specific genomic edits.
ContributorsNguyen, Toan Thai Tran (Author) / Brafman, David (Thesis advisor) / Wang, Xiao (Committee member) / Tian, Xiaojun (Committee member) / Arizona State University (Publisher)
Created2020
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Description
Cell fate is a complex and dynamic process with many genetic components. It has often been likened to “multistable” mathematical systems because of the numerous possible “stable” states, or cell types, that cells may end up in. Due to its complexity, understanding the process of cell fate and

Cell fate is a complex and dynamic process with many genetic components. It has often been likened to “multistable” mathematical systems because of the numerous possible “stable” states, or cell types, that cells may end up in. Due to its complexity, understanding the process of cell fate and differentiation has proven challenging. A better understanding of cell differentiation has applications in regenerative stem cell therapies, disease pathologies, and gene regulatory networks.
A variety of different genes have been associated with cell fate. For example, the Nanog/Oct-4/Sox2 network forms the core interaction of a gene network that maintains stem cell pluripotency, and Oct-4 and Sox2 also play a role in the tissue types that stem cells eventually differentiate into. Using the CRISPR/cas9 based homology independent targeted integration (HITI) method developed by Suzuki et al., we can integrate fluorescent tags behind genes with reasonable efficiency via the non-homologous end joining (NHEJ) DNA repair pathway. With human embryonic kidney (HEK) 293T cells, which can be transfected with high efficiencies, we aim to create a three-parameter reporter cell line with fluorescent tags for three different genes related to cell fate. This cell line would provide several advantages for the study of cell fate, including the ability to quantitatively measure cell state, observe expression heterogeneity among a population of genetically identical cells, and easily monitor fluctuations in expression patterns.
The project is partially complete at this time. This report discusses progress thus far, as well as the challenges faced and the future steps for completing the reporter line.
ContributorsLoveday, Tristan Andre (Author) / Wang, Xiao (Thesis director) / Brafman, David (Committee member) / Harrington Bioengineering Program (Contributor) / Barrett, The Honors College (Contributor)
Created2019-05