Ribosome-mediated incorporation of a non-standard amino acid into a peptide through expansion of the genetic code

Nature ◽  
1992 ◽  
Vol 356 (6369) ◽  
pp. 537-539 ◽  
Author(s):  
J. D. Bain ◽  
Christopher Switzer ◽  
Richard Chamberlin ◽  
Steven A. Benner
2017 ◽  
Author(s):  
Timothy M. Wannier ◽  
Aditya M. Kunjapur ◽  
Daniel P. Rice ◽  
Michael J. McDonald ◽  
Michael M. Desai ◽  
...  

AbstractEfforts are underway to construct several recoded genomes anticipated to exhibit multi-virus resistance, enhanced non-standard amino acid (NSAA) incorporation, and capability for synthetic biocontainment. Though we succeeded in pioneering the first genomically recoded organism (Escherichia colistrain C321.ΔA), its fitness is far lower than that of its non-recoded ancestor, particularly in defined media. This fitness deficit severely limits its utility for NSAA-linked applications requiring defined media such as live cell imaging, metabolic engineering, and industrial-scale protein production. Here, we report adaptive evolution of C321.ΔA for more than 1,000 generations in independent replicate populations grown in glucose minimal media. Evolved recoded populations significantly exceed the growth rates of both the ancestral C321.ΔA and non-recoded strains, permitting use of the recoded chassis in several new contexts. We use next-generation sequencing to identify genes mutated in multiple independent populations, and we reconstruct individual alleles in ancestral strains via multiplex automatable genome engineering (MAGE) to quantify their effects on fitness. Several selective mutations occur only in recoded evolved populations, some of which are associated with altering the translation apparatus in response to recoding, whereas others are not apparently associated with recoding, but instead correct for off-target mutations that occurred during initial genome engineering. This report demonstrates that laboratory evolution can be applied after engineering of recoded genomes to streamline fitness recovery compared to application of additional targeted engineering strategies that may introduce further unintended mutations. In doing so, we provide the most comprehensive insight to date into the physiology of the commonly used C321.ΔA strain.Significance StatementAfter demonstrating construction of an organism with an altered genetic code, we sought to evolve this organism for many generations to improve its fitness and learn what unique changes natural selection would bestow upon it. Although this organism initially had impaired fitness, we observed that adaptive laboratory evolution resulted in several selective mutations that corrected for insufficient translation termination and for unintended mutations that occurred when originally altering the genetic code. This work further bolsters our understanding of the pliability of the genetic code, it will help guide ongoing and future efforts seeking to recode genomes, and it results in a useful strain for non-standard amino acid incorporation in numerous contexts relevant for research and industry.


Amino Acids ◽  
2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Thomas L. Williams ◽  
Debra J. Iskandar ◽  
Alexander R. Nödling ◽  
Yurong Tan ◽  
Louis Y. P. Luk ◽  
...  

AbstractGenetic code expansion is a powerful technique for site-specific incorporation of an unnatural amino acid into a protein of interest. This technique relies on an orthogonal aminoacyl-tRNA synthetase/tRNA pair and has enabled incorporation of over 100 different unnatural amino acids into ribosomally synthesized proteins in cells. Pyrrolysyl-tRNA synthetase (PylRS) and its cognate tRNA from Methanosarcina species are arguably the most widely used orthogonal pair. Here, we investigated whether beneficial effect in unnatural amino acid incorporation caused by N-terminal mutations in PylRS of one species is transferable to PylRS of another species. It was shown that conserved mutations on the N-terminal domain of MmPylRS improved the unnatural amino acid incorporation efficiency up to five folds. As MbPylRS shares high sequence identity to MmPylRS, and the two homologs are often used interchangeably, we examined incorporation of five unnatural amino acids by four MbPylRS variants at two temperatures. Our results indicate that the beneficial N-terminal mutations in MmPylRS did not improve unnatural amino acid incorporation efficiency by MbPylRS. Knowledge from this work contributes to our understanding of PylRS homologs which are needed to improve the technique of genetic code expansion in the future.


Author(s):  
Ashley M Buckle ◽  
Malcolm Buckle

In addition to the canonical loss-of-function mutations, mutations in proteins may additionally result in gain-of-function through the binary activation of cryptic ‘structural capacitance elements’. Our previous bioinformatic analysis allowed us to propose a new mechanism of protein evolution - structural capacitance – that arises via the generation of new elements of microstructure upon mutations that cause a disorder-to-order (DO) transition in previously disordered regions of proteins. Here we propose that the DO transition is a necessary follow-on from expected early codon-anticodon and tRNA acceptor stem-amino acid usage, via the accumulation of structural capacitance elements - reservoirs of disorder in proteins. We develop this argument further to posit that structural capacitance is an inherent consequence of the evolution of the genetic code.


2006 ◽  
Vol 37 (1) ◽  
pp. 83-103 ◽  
Author(s):  
Sávio Torres de Farias ◽  
Carlos Henrique Costa Moreira ◽  
Romeu Cardoso Guimarães

2020 ◽  
Vol 10 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Florian Kaiser ◽  
Sarah Krautwurst ◽  
Sebastian Salentin ◽  
V. Joachim Haupt ◽  
Christoph Leberecht ◽  
...  

1984 ◽  
Vol 14 (1-4) ◽  
pp. 589-596 ◽  
Author(s):  
Daniel Grafstein

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