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.
P2RX7 promotes a pro-memory signature in effector CD8+ T cells dependent on Zeb2 negative regulation
Memory CD8+ T cells protect against secondary viral infections. They develop and maintain exclusively in circulation (e.g. central memory - Tcm) or are excluded from re-circulation (resident memory - Trm). The extracellular ATP receptor P2RX7 promotes both Tcm and Trm generation. High (P2RX7hi) P2RX7-expressing early effector cells show survival, memory and pluripotency genes. Conversely, many terminal effector (TE) and apoptosis genes are upregulated in low (P2RX7lo) P2RX7-expressing cells. Among these genes is the zinc-finger transcriptional repressor Zeb2, which promotes TE differentiation at the expense of the memory cell pool. Given that Zeb2 was higher in P2RX7lo early effector cells, we postulated that Zeb2 ablation would allow P2RX7-deficient CD8+ T cells to skew towards memory subsets. To test this, we used RNP-based CRISPR-Cas9 to knockout Zeb2 in wild type or P2RX7-deficient P14 cells. At the memory timepoint, Zeb2 ablation led to a rescue of the ability of P2RX7-deficient cells to differentiate into the CD62L+ Tcm and CD69hiCD103hi Trm subsets, as well as increase the population of each. Our data suggest that P2RX7 imprints a pro-memory signature that is, to some extent, dependent on the negative regulation of Zeb2.