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Evolving orthogonal suppressor tRNAs to incorporate modified amino acids Andre Maranhao, and Andrew D. Ellington ACS Synth. Biol., Just Accepted Manuscript • DOI: 10.1021/acssynbio.6b00145 • Publication Date (Web): 07 Sep 2016 Downloaded from http://pubs.acs.org on September 8, 2016
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ACS Synthetic Biology
Title: Evolving orthogonal suppressor tRNAs to incorporate modified amino acids Authors: Andre C. Maranhao1, Andrew D. Ellington1* 1. Center for Systems and Synthetic Biology, University of Texas at Austin, Austin,
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Texas 78712 Abstract
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There have been considerable advancements in the incorporation of non-canonical
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amino acids (ncAA) into proteins over the last two decades. The most widely used method
9
for site-specific incorporation of non-canonical amino acids, amber stop codon suppression,
10
typically employs an orthogonal translation system (OTS) consisting of a heterologous
11
aminoacyl-tRNA synthetase:tRNA pair that can potentially expand an organism’s genetic
12
code. However, the orthogonal machinery sometimes imposes fitness costs on an organism,
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in part due to mischarging and a lack of specificity. Using compartmentalized partnered
14
replication (CPR) and a newly developed pheS negative selection, we evolved several new
15
orthogonal Methanocaldococcus jannaschii (Mj) tRNA variants tRNAs with increased amber
16
suppression activity, but that also showed up to three-fold reduction in promiscuous
17
aminoacylation by endogenous aminoacyl-tRNA synthetases (aaRSs).
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orthogonality of these variants greatly reduced organismal fitness costs associated in part
19
due to tRNA mischarging. Using these methods, we were also able to evolve tRNAs that
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supported the specific incorporation of 3-halo-tyrosines (3-Cl-Y, 3-Br-Y, and 3-I-Y) in E. coli.
The increased
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Keywords: non-canonical amino acids, orthogonal translation systems, tRNA, aminoacyl-tRNA
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synthetase
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Introduction
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Over the last two decades, researchers have attempted to create proteins with new
2
functionalities through the incorporation of non-canonical amino acids. Expanding the
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genetic code has in turn typically been achieved through the introduction of orthogonal
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aaRS:tRNA pairs, especially pairs that rely on suppressor tRNAs. The archaeal M. jannaschii
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(Mj) tyrosyl-tRNA syntethase:tRNA pair has proven particularly tractable for the
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introduction of non-canonical amino acids in E. coli, in that both the synthetase and the
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tRNA are largely orthogonal to the other aaRSs and their cognate tRNAs1-4. However, most
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experiments to date have attempted to introduce only a single non-canonical amino acid
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into a protein, and have not attempted multiple incorporations or proteome-wide
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incorporation. This is in part because there are concomitant fitness costs to altering the
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genetic code. In particular, it is known that inaccurate translation, such as frameshifting
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and false termination, can lead to fitness costs5. In addition, recent work has demonstrated
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that E. coli strains containing orthogonal charging machinery will quickly delete the newly
14
introduced MjYRS6. We hypothesize that this may be due in part to the lack of charging
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fidelity: the wrong amino acid can go on tyrosine tRNA, or the wrong tRNA can be charged
16
with tyrosine.
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In other work, it was shown that promiscuous interactions between a p-
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acetylphenylalanine incorporating variant of MjYRS and E. coli prolyl-tRNAs could be
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remedied through over-expression of the endogenous E. coli prolyl-tRNA synthetase7.
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Similarly, promiscuous interactions between endogenous E. coli tRNAs and an introduced
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heterologous aaRS can be mitigated by making that heterologous synthetase inducible as
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well as by increasing the expression level and hence the concentration of the paired
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heterologous tRNA. However, doing so shifts the burden for orthogonal behavior unto the
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heterologous tRNA.
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There are various routes that can be pursued to improve the ability of cells to
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incorporate non-canonical amino acids and to increase the fitness of the resulting expanded
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genetic codes. Isaacs and co-workers have developed an E. coli strain that completely lacks
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amber codons8, and this should limit fitness effects that arise from amber suppression.
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However, the effort required for the development of this strain was extraordinary, and the
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use of wholescale genome engineering to alter the genetic code is not yet widely available.
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The use of directed evolution methods to improve the efficiency and reduce the promiscuity
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of charging complements rational design approaches9.
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Therefore, we have attempted to utilize a powerful directed evolution method,
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compartmentalized partnered replication (CPR)10 to optimize the M. jannaschii tyrosine
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suppressor tRNA for efficient and specific suppression. To ensure improved orthogonal
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behavior, we implemented a new negative selection scheme in place of the widely used
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barnase2,11. We instead adapted a mutant E. coli phenylalanyl-tRNA synthetase (PheS-
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A294G) with relaxed substrate specificity to create a robust and tunable negative selection
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method via the introduction of the toxic p-Cl-phenylalanine12. This selection functions to
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select against mischarging of MjY-tRNA variants by the host aaRS machinery.
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By using CPR with negative selection, we have generated a new series of tRNAs with
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enhanced amber suppression activity for not only tyrosine, but also for three non-canonical
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amino acids. These tRNAs show up to three-fold reduction in promiscuous aminoacylation
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by endogenous aaRSs, and rescued reduced cell growth observed in the parental M.
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jannaschii tyrosine suppressor tRNA.
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Results and Discussion
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Selection Strategy
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A technique known as compartmentalized partnered replication (CPR) has
2
previously been used for the directed evolution of functional and specific tRNAs10. A
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general schematic for CPR can be found in Figure 1; in short, tRNA libraries are expressed
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in individual E. coli cells, which are in turn emulsified into individual droplets. Functional
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suppressor tRNAs lead to the production of Taq polymerase, and emulsion PCR in the
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presence of tRNA-specific primers in turn leads to the amplification of those tRNA variants
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responsible for suppression and Taq polymerase production.
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CPR mock selections were first conducted to optimize the protocol for amber
9
suppression with the Methanocaldococcus jannaschii (Mj) tyrosine tRNA in combination
10
with Mj tyrosyl-tRNA synthetase (MjYRS).
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tRNAoptCUA3, an efficient suppressor that has previously been partially optimized by directed
12
evolution. The tRNAoptCUA was placed under the control of the lpp promoter, which has
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previously been used in successful suppression experiments1. In order to ensure that
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selected tRNAs would be efficient suppressors, four amber codons were simultaneously
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introduced into Taq polymerase. The T7-driven Taq polymerase and all aaRS genes were
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under the control of the tacI promoter and were induced by IPTG.
Mock selections were carried out with
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Initial ranging selections were carried out in which E. coli BL21(DE3) cells
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expressing wild MjYRS were competed with cells containing an E. coli seryl-tRNA synthetase
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(EcSRS), which should not aminoacylate tRNAoptCUA. Cells bearing the EcSRS gene should not
20
suppress amber codons, and thus any proteins or functions that are produced (such as DNA
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amplification via
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aminoacylation of tRNAoptCUA by endogenous E. coli synthetases. We determined that cells
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induced with 0.4 mM IPTG for three hours prior to emulsification provided the optimal
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conditions for ensuring emulsion PCR amplification by cells expressing MjYRS, while
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eliminating similar amplification by cells expressing EcSRS.
Taq polymerase) represent background
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promiscuous
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The level of enrichment during selection was determined by competitions with a
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disrupted, inactive form of MjYRS that contained an introduced NotI site.
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suppression and amplification, we recovered emulsion PCR products from different ratios
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of cells containing functional MjYRS to cells containing inactive MjYRS. After three rounds
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of mock selections, equal amounts of PCR product from each round of CPR were digested
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with NotI and the digestion products were analyzed by gel electrophoresis. From these gels,
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it was estimated that about 103-fold enrichment of active over inactive MjYRS could be
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expected for each round of CPR (Figure S1).
Following
9 10
Development of a negative selection method
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To date, we have primarily employed CPR for positive selection. In order to ensure
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orthogonal behavior with respect to endogenous E. coli synthetases, there is a need for
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negative selection of suppressor tRNA libraries, especially a negative selection whose
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stringency can be tuned. To this end, we have adapted a negative selection based on the
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mutant E. coli synthetase PheS
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specificity that allows aminoacylation of E coli tRNAPhe with p-Cl-phenylalanine (p-Cl-Phe),
17
which upon incorporation into the proteome leads to cell death.
12,
a variant of PheS with relaxed substrate binding
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By having tRNA variants suppress the expression of mutant PheS, rather than Taq
19
polymerase, a negative selection could be imposed, and the selection could be tuned by
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varying the concentration of p-Cl-Phe and the duration of growth in media containing p-Cl-
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Phe. We implemented this negative selection technique via ACP-(PheS-A294G) fusion
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protein possessing a flexible linker with two amber codons. Passage in liquid culture
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containing p-Cl-Phe should cull the library of promiscuous tRNA variants expressed in the
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absence of the cognate Mj synthetase.
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Selection for improved tyrosine suppressor tRNAs
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The previously engineered tRNAoptCUA suppressor was also used as a starting point
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for library design. The sequence and structure of tRNAoptCUA (Figure 2A) were compared
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with the sequences and secondary structures of other, non-suppressor E. coli tRNAs in
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order to determine the likely features that might lead to mischarging. When studying their
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secondary structures, similarities were observed between tRNAoptCUA and the T-arms and
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anticodon stems of tRNAoptCUA and EctRNAserU.
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generated two first-generation libraries that randomized residues in the anticodon region
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(Ac-Lib) and T-arm (T-Lib) (Figure 2A), a strategy that had previously proven successful
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for the isolation of other improved tRNA variants10. Each of these libraries contained 4.2 x
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106 variants, a convenient number for screening via emulsion-based methods. The
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sequences for all relevant tRNA variants can be found in Table S1.
Using tRNAoptCUA as the template, we
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Ac-Lib and T-Lib libraries were subjected to three rounds of CPR positive selection,
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one round of pheS negative selection, and then a final round of CPR positive selection.
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During the first two rounds of CPR, selections were carried out under the same conditions
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as the mock selections described above. However, for the third and fifth rounds of CPR,
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tRNA library pools were placed under the control of the stronger E. coli leuQ tRNA promoter
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and challenged with a Taq polymerase gene that contained six amber stop codons. We
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hypothesized that selection under the control of a very strong tRNA promoter would lead to
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greater competition with endogenous cellular tRNAs, and that any deleterious off-target
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effects that occurred would help cull promiscuous, toxic variants from the pool during the
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overnight growth step prior to selection.
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Following selection, the tRNA pools were cloned and sequenced. The Ac-Lib had
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collapsed to one anticodon stem sequence, while the T-lib displayed somewhat greater T-
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arm sequence diversity.
Interestingly, all sequenced Ac-Lib and T-Lib tRNA variants
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(including the most active variants, Figure S2) possessed one or more mutations outside
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the randomized library region (Figure S3). Some of these non-library mutations were in
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either the tRNA promoter or in the flanking 5’ and 3’ tRNA processing sequences; because
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these likely changed expression or processing, rather than intrinsic tRNA function, these
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variants were excluded from further characterization.
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Suppression activities for twenty individual tRNA variants with wild-type flanking
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sequences were determined via GFP suppression efficiency assays. Suppression efficiency
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was measured in the presence of a given evolved tRNA and its cognate synthetase, a GFP
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reporter gene that contained three amber codons in place of three surface exposed
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tyrosines (Y39, Y151, Y182) was used. GFP should only be made if the evolved tRNA is
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efficiently charged by its synthetase. Suppression orthogonality was measured in the
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presence of a given evolved tRNA but in the absence of the cognate synthetase, a GFP
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reporter gene that contained only one amber at position Y39 was used. In this case, GFP
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should only be made if there is significant mischarging of the tRNA by an endogenous aaRS.
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The most active Ac-Lib variants proved to be Ac.02, Ac.10, and Ac.11, all of which
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possessed the same anticodon stem sequence and additional mutations elsewhere in the
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tRNA. Variant Ac.02 had two non-library mutations: G71A in the acceptor stem and A57G
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in the T-loop. Variants Ac.10 and Ac.11 had an additional acceptor stem (C70U) and T-loop
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(U54C) mutation, respectively.
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mutations, C70U and G71A were removed from Ac.02 and Ac.10, but variants lacking these
21
mutations could not be successfully cloned under the leuQ promoter.
During initial attempts to study these non-library
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The most active T-Lib variants were T.08 and T.12 contained different T-arm
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sequences, but possessed the same C74U mutation at the 3’ end of the tRNA. This non-
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library, T-arm mutation was excluded from further consideration as it is known to lead to
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cleavage and re-addition of 3’ CCA, which adds another step to tRNA processing and
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effectively slows maturation13.
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important for tRNA behavior.
The remaining non-library mutations were clearly
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In order to create a tRNA variant with even greater efficiency and orthogonality, we
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attempted to combine the Ac-Lib consensus anticodon stem sequence (and accompanying
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non-library mutations C70U and G71A) with combinations of the selected T-arm variants
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(T.08 and T.12) and with non-library T-loop mutations – A57G from variant Ac.02 and U54C
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from variant Ac.10. Ten combinatorial variants were generated (Figure S4). AcT.07 and
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AcT.09 lacked the U54C non-library mutation from the T-loop and could not be stably
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cloned, again indicating the importance of these selected, spontaneous mutations for tRNA
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function.
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From the eight stably cloned combinatorial variants, only variant AcT.05 displayed
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amber suppression efficiency and orthogonality levels comparable to those of the parental
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Ac.Lib and T.Lib tRNA variants. Variant AcT.05 (Figure 2B) derives from combination of
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the common anticodon stem sequence, the T-arm from variant T.08, and the C70U non-
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library mutation from Ac.02.
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suppression efficiency and orthogonality (Figure S5), was thus the best and most diverse
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tRNA variant, and was adopted as a platform for the further evolution of highly orthogonal
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tRNAs.
Variant AcT.05 had a favorable combination of high
19 20
Second-generation tyrosine suppressor tRNA selection
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A new library based on AcT.05 (AcT5S; Figure S6) was generated that further
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varied those positions where non-library mutations were found during the first set of
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selections (Figure S3). This library was subjected to two rounds of CPR, followed by one
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round of pheS negative selection, and then three more rounds of CPR. Library members had
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to suppress Taq polymerase genes containing six and eight amber codons during the first
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and second rounds of CPR, respectively.
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polymerase gene contained ten amber codons.
In the final three rounds of CPR, the Taq
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Post-selection sequencing of the selected AcT5S library revealed almost no non-
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library mutations, validating our strategy of varying these additional positions to further
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improve functionality. However, no sequence convergence occurred in either library and
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considerable diversity was still observed. Of the thirty six variants assessed, the most
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efficient tRNA variants were re-assayed (Figure S7) and variant S7 was found to be the
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most efficient and orthogonal. Variant S7 (Figure 2C) displayed slightly higher amber
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suppression efficiency compared to both the parental tRNA, AcT.05 and to tRNAoptCUA
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(Figure 2D). Variant S7 and AcT.05 display comparable levels of orthogonal behavior, and
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are considerably more orthogonal than tRNAoptCUA (Figure 2E).
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Variant S7 contains two new G:U wobble base pairs in its acceptor stem.
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Interestingly, several other active variants from the AcT5S library pool (Figure S8) possess
14
at least one G:U wobble base pair in the acceptor stem, and three other AcT5S variants have
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two; all of these occur at different positions. Wobble base pairs in tRNA stems have
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previously been shown to contribute to recognition14,15, in part by modifying the structure
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or flexibility of the stem. For example, the G3:U70 wobble in A. flugidus tRNAAla kinks the
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tRNA and so properly orients the tRNA’s 3’-CCA with the paired synthetase’s active site16.
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Such stem distortions and concomitant alterations in flexibility are common in tRNAs for
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class I aminoacyl-tRNA synthetases17. In at least one case, the flexibility of the arginyl tRNA
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from hamster plays a role in its binding to and recognition by its synthetase18. In previous
22
work from our laboratory, it was shown that removing a single wobble pair (U69C) from the
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Saccharomyces cerevisiae tryptophanyl tRNA acceptor stem led to charging by E. coli
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histidinyl tRNA element9. Changes to acceptor stem flexibility appear to play a significant
25
role in tRNA recognition by aaRSs, both cognate and non-cognate. Changes to the acceptor
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stem sequence are also known to impact EF-Tu binding
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flexibility impacts not only charging but loading of tRNAs.
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19,20,
and it is possible that stem
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Selecting for increased 3-halo-tyrosine incorporation activity
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The tRNA variants S7 and tRNAoptCUA were also assayed for their ability to
6
incorporate the non-canonical amino acid 3-iodo-tyrosine21. In the presence of the non-
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canonical amino acid and its cognate synthetase, variant S7 incorporated 3-iodo-tyrosine at
8
less than 10% the activity observed with both tRNAoptCUA and another previously selected
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tRNA variant Nap1, a similar suppressor tRNA that was evolved to optimize EF-Tu binding
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and has been successfully used to incorporate numerous non-canonical amino acids2. As all
11
the selections which ultimately led to S7 tRNA were carried out with tyrosine, we reasoned
12
that this may have led to over-optimization for tyrosine incorporation. This may have in
13
turn resulted in poor suppression efficiency with amino acid analogues, possibly because
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balanced binding to EF-Tu by both a given tRNA and the charged amino acid are required
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for efficient translation.20,22,23.
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To test this hypothesis, we attempted to rescue the ability of S7 to incorporate non-
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canonical amino acids by carrying out a selection with the MjYRS variant
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specifically incorporates 3-halo-tyrosine analogs, and is known not to utilize tyrosine.
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Library designs (S7-TA, Figure 3A) were focused on positions in the tRNA known to
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interact with EF-Tu: positions 3, 6, 68, and 71 in the acceptor stem25, and positions 49-51
21
and 63-65 in the T-arm20. We and others have reasoned that simultaneous selection of the
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acceptor stem and T-arm would be most likely to yield highly efficient tRNAs2,26. Recalling
23
that a number of different acceptor stems recovered from the AcT5S library contained G:U
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base-pairs, positions 3, 6, 68, and 71 in the acceptor stem of the S7-TA library were
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restricted to either C or U.
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21,24
that
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Starting from the S7-TA library, two-round CPR selections were conducted with
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three different 3-halo-tyrosines: 3-chloro-tyrosine (3-Cl-Y), 3-bromo-tyrosine (3-Br-Y), and
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3-iodo-tyrosine (3-I-Y). Following an initial screen of thirty-six colonies, highly efficient
4
variants were screened by again examining the expression of a GFP gene that contained
5
three amber stop codons. Rescreening in triplicate led to the identification of the two most
6
active tRNA variants for each amino acid. Of the final six tRNA variants, one was the second
7
most active variant in both the 3-I-Y S7-TA library pool (C1) and the 3-Br-Y S7-TA library
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pool (G8).
9
The final five 3-halo-tyrosine tRNA variants (E4, E2, C1/G8, E7, and G2; Figure 3B)
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were assessed in suppression efficiency assays with 3-Cl-Y, 3-Br-Y, and 3-I-Y (Figure 3C).
11
These variants not only rescued the low efficiency of amber suppression with 3-halo
12
tyrosines originally observed with the parental S7 tRNA, but in some instances enhanced
13
amber suppression efficiency relative to previously evolved tRNAoptCUA and Nap1.
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comparison to the parental S7 tRNA variant, all five 3-halo-tyrosine tRNA variants displayed
15
between 12- and 16-fold increases in suppression efficiency with 3-Br-Y and 3-I-Y while
16
increasing suppression efficiency with 3-Cl-Y by between 16- and 20-fold. In particular,
17
variant C1/G8 displayed over 14-fold increases in suppression efficiency with all 3-halo-
18
tyorinses relative to its parental S7 tRNA variant, and gains of 20% and 6% suppression
19
efficiency relative to tRNAoptCUA for 3-I-Y and 3-Br-Y incorporation.
In
20
In order to measure the orthogonality of suppression, the tRNAs were again assayed
21
for the ability to suppress a GFP gene bearing only one amber stop codon in the absence of
22
their cognate synthetase (Figure 3D). Interestingly, positions 3 and 71 universally fixed to
23
cytosine for the most active tRNA variants from this selection, again pointing to the
24
potential role of tRNA flexibility in recognition.
25
orthogonal behavior comparable to that of the parental tRNA variants AcT.05 and S7, while
Only variant C1/G8 demonstrated
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other selected tRNAs seem to lose orthogonality.
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optimization for function with tyrosine result in reductions in mischarging, that
3
optimization for function with a non-canonical amino acid at least initially occur along
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pathways that lead to interactions with non-cognate synthetases or incorrect proofreading
5
by EF-Tu.
These results suggest that while
6 7
Selected suppressor tRNAs improve organismal fitness
8
In order to examine how CPR-based selections for improved suppression efficiency
9
and orthogonality also impacted organismal fitness, we compared the most orthogonal
10
selected variant, S7, with the previously evolved tRNAoptCUA and Nap1. These tRNAs were all
11
expressed under the control of the leuQ tRNA promoter in the strains DH10B E. coli and the
12
“Amberless” E. coli C321.ΔA (Figure 4). Each growth curve represents triplicate averages
13
which were subsequently fitted to a modified logistic growth model27 that estimates
14
maximum specific growth rate and lag time. Table S2 presents these two parameters and
15
their respective errors for each growth assay. Cells expressing tRNAoptCUA or Nap1 grew
16
noticeably slower, while the newly selected tRNA variant S7 appeared to reverse this
17
growth defect in DH10B E. coli (Figure 4A). This improvement in fitness also appeared to
18
be the case for all of the descendants of S7, including the seven 3-halo-tyrosine
19
incorporating tRNA variants, which for the most part grew better relative to the previously
20
selected tRNAs tRNAoptCUA and Nap1 (Figure S9).
21
The expression of a tRNA without its paired synthetase of course does not reflect
22
normal expression conditions, and additional growth assays were conducted with
23
constructs expressing either the wild-type tyrosyl-tRNA synthetase (MjYRS) or a variant of
24
MjYRS that specifically incorporates 3-halo-tyrosines22 (Mj(3IY)RS), both driven by
25
induction of the tacI promoter. Assessment with Mj(3IY)RS in the absence of 3-halo-
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tyrosines affords the opportunity to study growth effects when a heterologous synthetase
2
can bind to a tRNA but cannot aminoacylate it. Each tRNA and synthetase pair was grown in
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either 2xYT media with 2% glucose for catabolic repression of the paired synthetase, 2xYT
4
for leaky expression of the synthetase, or 2xYT media with 0.1 mM IPTG for induction of the
5
synthetase. These growth assays were again conducted using the three tRNA variants
6
(Nap1, tRNAoptCUA, and S7) in either DH10B E. coli (Figure 5) or “Amberless” E. coli C321.ΔA
7
(Figure 6). In DH10B E. coli, growth of the suppressor tRNA variant S7 paired with the
8
wild-type MjYRS is roughly equivalent to that of a pBR322 control given replicate error
9
(Figure 5, upper left). However, both the tRNAoptCUA and Nap1 variants demonstrated
10
markedly slower growth phenotypes.
11
tRNAs gave similar growth curves, irrespective of provenance (Figure 6). Overall these
12
findings suggest that fitness effects from orthogonal charging systems in large part result
13
from toxicities associated with amber suppression by promiscuously aminoacylated tRNAs.
14
This finding is echoed by the fact that S7 is rendered toxic to cells when its paired
15
synthetase is overexpressed (Figure 5, lower left).
In contrast, in the “Amberless” E. coli C321.ΔA, all
16 17
Conclusion
18
Transfer RNA sits at the crux of multiple biochemical processes required for
19
translation, and the directed evolution of tRNAs has therefore proven to be a powerful tool
20
for changing the translation apparatus. We have selected several Mj tyrosine suppressor
21
tRNA variants that have both improved suppression efficiencies and reduced mischarging
22
by endogenous aaRSs. We achieved improved orthogonality by incorporating a novel
23
liquid-based pheS negative selection. The accumulated changes in tRNA orthogonality also
24
led to decreased fitness costs to organisms that contain these tRNAs. The impact of tRNA
25
identity on fitness has only rarely been gauged; previous analysis has focused on the fitness
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1
costs of codon reassignment rather than tRNA orthogonality28. We used the same selection
2
methods to further generate tRNA variants that could efficiently incorporate halo-tyrosines.
3
The sequence of any given tRNA can be seen as a balancing act for multiple contacts
4
with different partners, from synthetases to EF-Tu to the ribosome itself.
5
previous work has tended to focus on only a single aspect of tRNA function, such as
6
increased amber suppression or improved EF-Tu binding2,26, and did not take into account
7
changes in translational fidelity that could arise from mischarging. Selection experiments
8
that seek to optimize tRNA function must combine mutations from multiple regions for
9
maximal impact, and based on this work, we present a model MjY-tRNA library (Figure
10
S10) that can be used for selections aimed at optimizing the incorporation of non-canonical
11
amino acids.
However,
12
Most recent work for optimization of the Mj tyrosine suppressor pair has focused
13
upon evolution of the MjYRS7,11. We have shown that further gains for an expanded genetic
14
code are possible through the directed evolution of the heterologous tRNA. Previous
15
attempts to improve tRNA function employed traditional positive selection schemes (e.g.
16
antibiotic resistance selection) in conjunction with a strong negative selection (e.g.
17
barnase2,11). In this work, we present an alternative approach by implementing a negative
18
selection based on expression of mutant E. coli phenylalanyl-tRNA synthetase (PheS-
19
A294G) with relaxed substrate specificity12 in conjunction with proven CPR-based positive
20
selection10. Selection by mutant E. coli PheS production in the presence of a variable
21
concentration of p-Cl-Phe affords the benefits of a tunable negative selection, which allows
22
for gradually increasing stringency for orthogonal behavior by tRNA variants. Additionally,
23
CPR as a positive selection technique confers the benefit of exponential amplification found
24
in PCR, which ultimately leads to significantly higher enrichment per selection round. The
25
techniques employed herein for both tRNA selection and library design should be readily
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adaptable to any target non-canonical amino acid, or to other heterologous synthetase and
2
tRNA pairs.
3
The generation of improved suppressor tRNA variants may have been a
4
consequence of the use of CPR, which occurs partially in vivo and partially in vitro, as a
5
selection method. During CPR, cells would have had to survive and propagate while
6
expressing variant tRNAs, but this initial selection for fitness should not have impacted the
7
recovery of functional tRNA variants during positive selection, because cells are lysed
8
following emulsification. This in turn led to a very stringent positive selection with the
9
enrichment of functional variants estimated to be roughly 103-fold per round of CPR
10
(Figure S1). In addition, we were able to introduce a new negative selection system, which
11
further refined the orthogonality of and likely the fitness costs accorded to suppressor
12
tRNAs. Variant S7 and its descendants can therefore be viewed as tRNAs that have been
13
more fully optimized for function, including for orthogonality and fitness, than tRNAoptCUA
14
and Nap1.
15
That said, fitness costs were only partially due to tRNA-mediated amino acid
16
incorporation into proteins. Even when incorporation was not programmed, due to a lack
17
of paired charging machinery (Figures 4A and S9) or to a lack of genomic amber codons
18
(the “Amberless” E. coli C321.ΔA; Figures 4B and 6), the selected tRNAs still proved to have
19
less of an impact on cell growth than previously selected variants. These results point to
20
other potential fitness costs in engineering translation, such as background mischarging or
21
competitive inhibition of other tRNA synthetases. Gratifyingly, CPR, especially when used in
22
conjunction with a negative selection, appears to be able to optimize for function and fitness
23
simultaneously. Overall, these selection experiments re-emphasize that multiple positions
24
in the compact tRNA molecule work together to balance efficiency, orthogonality, and
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fitness, and that stringent directed evolution experiments can nonetheless lead to a
2
balancing of all of these different properties.
3 4
Materials and Methods
5
Cloning and amplification of plasmids was carried out in DH10B E. coli (Invitrogen).
6
Positive selection via CPR was carried out in BL21(DE3) E. coli strain.
7
“Amberless” E. coli C321.ΔA 8 was used for growth rate assays. All E. coli culture for both
8
cloning, selection, and assay occurred in 2xYT broth (Fisher Scientific).
9
concentrations were as follows: ampicillin (100 μg/mL), chloramphenicol (34 μg/mL), and
10
kanamycin (50 μg/mL). Plasmid constructs were sequence verified. All oligonucleotides
11
used in PCR amplication, sequencing, and library construction were synthesized by
12
Integrated DNA Technology (San Diego) and their sequences are listed in Table S3.
A strain of
Antibiotic
13 14
tRNA and tRNA-synthetase expression plasmids
15
We employed two previously designed plasmids for either sole expression of a tRNA gene
16
(pBRIVTC3B) or dual expression of tRNA and aminoacyl-tRNA synthetase genes (pRST) 9.
17
For plasmid pRST, the synthetase cassette was sequenced with forward and reverse oligos
18
ACM001 and ACM002. For both pBRIVTC3B and pRST plasmids, the tRNA cassette was
19
sequenced with forward and reverse oligos ACM003 and ACM004.
20 21
Assembly of tRNA libraries and variants
22
Libraries for tRNA selections were assembled by PCR amplification of a DNA Ultramer Oligo
23
(IDT). Combinatorial variants and other desired tRNA genes were similarly assembled from
24
amplification of an Ultramer Oligo (IDT). All Ultramer library and variant amplification was
25
done with tRNA-Lib_F and tRNA-Lib-R oligos.
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Reporter and positive selection plasmid construction
3
All variants of Taq polymerase and superfast GFP (“sFastGFP”) 29 are flanked by 5’ NdeI and
4
3’ XhoI restriction sites (NEB). Taq polymerase and sFastGFP variants were cloned into
5
pACYCSolo 9, a T7-driven expression vector derived from pACYCDuet (Novagene). For
6
plasmid pACYCSolo, expression cassettes were sequenced with forward and reverse oligos
7
ACM031 and ACM032.
8 9
Codon optimized variants of Taq polymerase were assembled and amplified from multiple
10
gBlock gene fragments (IDT).
11
assembled containing four, six, eight, and ten amber codons. Amber codons replaced
12
surface exposed tyrosine residues as determined by the crystal structure of Taq polymerase
13
(1TAQ, pdb). DNA sequence information for Taq polymerase can be found in Table S4.
14
Variant Taq-4xAmb has four amber codons replacing surface exposed tyrosine residues
15
corresponding to Y24, Y45, Y116, and Y146. Derived from Taq-4xAmb, variant Taq-6xAmb
16
has six amber codons replacing surface exposed tyrosine residues corresponding to Y24,
17
Y45, Y116, Y146, Y161, and Y182. Derived from Taq-6xAmb, variant Taq-8xAmb has eight
18
amber codons replacing surface exposed tyrosine residues corresponding to Y24, Y45,
19
Y116, Y134, Y146, Y161, Y172, and Y182. Derived from Taq-8xAmb, variant Taq-10xAmb
20
has ten amber codons replacing surface exposed tyrosine residues corresponding to Y24,
21
Y45, Y116, Y146, Y161, Y182, Y339, and Y378.
Along with wild type Taq polymerase, variants were
22 23
Codon optimized variants of sFastGFP were amplified from single gBlock gene fragments
24
(IDT). Sequence information for sFastGFP can be found in Table S4. Along with wild type
25
sFastGFP, two variants were cloned containing one and three amber codons at surface-
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1
exposed tyrosines as determined by the crystal structure of sfGFP (2B3P, pdb). Variant
2
sFastGFP-1xAmb replaced surface-exposed Y39 with an amber codon.
3
sFastGFP-3xAmb, three surface-exposed tyrosine residues – Y39, Y151, Y182 – were
4
replaced with amber codons.
For variant
5 6
Construction of pSELt vector
7
The kanamycin resistance (kanR) gene derived from pET28a plasmid. The leuQ promoter
8
driven tRNA expression cassette derived from pRST.B plasmid.
9
replication derived from pACYCSolo plasmid. The mutated constitutive trpL promoter as
The 15A origin of
10
well as E. coli pheS gene bearing a A294G mutation were amplified from pcat-pheS
11
whereas the intervening ACP gene derived from pACP (NEB). The linker sequence between
12
ACP and pheS-A294G containing two amber stop codons resulted from overlap extension of
13
primer overhangs. The sequence for pSELt can be found in Table S5 and its plasmid map is
14
in Figure S11.
30
15 16
Tyrosine suppressor tRNA selection by Compartmentalized Partnered Replication
17
(CPR)
18
The CPR protocol used for this work represents an optimized version of the original CPR
19
protocol 10.
20 21
Tyrosine tRNA libraries were cloned into pRST.B_66x.AA vector and transformed into
22
BL21(DE3) E. coli harboring pACYCSolo_Taq plasmid containing a predetermined number
23
of amber codons in the Taq polymerase gene. Each round of selection had transformation
24
efficiencies >107 to ensure complete coverage of the theoretical diversity from an initial
25
library. Following one-hour transformation recovery in SOC media, transformed cells were
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diluted 1:10 in 2xYT media containing 2% glucose as well as ampicillin and
2
chloramphenicol. This transformation culture was shaken overnight at 37°C for twelve
3
hours. After twelve hours, a new culture was prepared from 4 mL of fresh 2xYT with
4
appropriate antibiotics into which 200 μL of overnight transformation culture was added.
5
This inoculated culture was shaken for one hour at 37°C after which IPTG was added for a
6
final concentration of 0.4 mM. Induced selection culture was shaken at 37°C for three
7
hours. After the three-hour expression, cells (300 μL) were spun down (15 min, 1500g,
8
4°C) and gently washed twice with chilled 1x Taq buffer (50 mM KCl, 10 mM Tris-HCl pH 8,
9
1.5 mM MgCl2). Washed cells were resuspended in 300 μL CPR buffer (50 mM KCl, 10 mM
10
Tris-HCl pH 8, 1.5 mM MgCl2, 200 μM dNTP, 0.3 nM each CPR primer (ACM 221 and
11
ACM222), 100 μM TMAC, and 0.05% RNaseI).
12 13
Resuspended cells were added to a pre-chilled 2 mL microtube containing: 876 μL Tegosoft
14
(Evonik), 240 μL mineral oil (Sigma), 84 μL AbilEW09 (Evonik), and the rubber tip from a 1
15
mL syringe. This mixture was allowed to rotate for five minutes in a cold room (4°C). The
16
cell-surfactant-oil mixture was emulsified using a TissueLyser LT (Qiagen), which was
17
operated at 42 Hz for four minutes in a cold room (4°C). Next, emulsified cells were thermal
18
cycled [95°C:3 min, 20 cycles of (95°C:30 s, 59°C:30 s, 72°C:90s/kb), 72°C:5 min, 4°C:∞] in
19
100 μL aliquots to amplify and recover functional tRNA variants. After thermal cycling,
20
emulsions were pooled on ice, spun down (10 min, 12,000g, 4°C), and the top layer of
21
excess oil was removed. The remaining emulsion was broken by applying an equal volume
22
of chloroform/isoamyl alcohol/phenol (24:1:25) (Sigma) and vortexing.
23
emulsion was then applied to a PhaseLock tube (5 Prime) and spun (2 min, 16,000g). The
24
top layer or aqueous fraction from this first extraction was pipetted into a fresh microtube
25
to which an equal volume of chloroform (Sigma) was added. This second extraction served
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to remove residual organics and, after vortexing, it was placed in a new PhaseLock tube and
2
spun (2 min, 16,000g). The top layer or aqueous fraction from this second extraction was
3
collected and column purified (Zymo Research Corp). The elution from column purification
4
served as template for a secondary or recovery PCR using AccuPrime Pfx (Invitrogen) and
5
primers specific to the overhang regions of CPR primers used during emulsion PCR (see
6
Table S3). Resulting secondary or recovery PCR was run on a 0.8% agarose gel. The band
7
corresponding to the desired emulsion PCR amplicon was excised from the agarose gel and
8
extracted (Promega). This purified secondary amplicon was then used as template for a
9
third and final PCR, which generated sufficient template for cloning by restriction digest by
10
BsrGI and KpnI (NEB) for a subsequent selection round or for sequencing purposes.
11 12
Selection of 3-halo-tyrosine tRNA libraries closely resembled the tyrosine suppressor tRNA
13
selection scheme described above.
14
transformation, a new culture was prepared from 4 mL of fresh 2xYT containing 2 mM of
15
the appropriate 3-halo-tyrosine (3-Cl-Y, 3-Br-Y, 3-I-Y) with appropriate antibiotics into
16
which 200 μL of overnight transformation culture was added. This inoculated culture was
17
shaken for one hour at 37°C after which IPTG was added for a final concentration of 0.4 mM.
18
Following induction with IPTG and expression, cells were harvested and treated by the
19
same CPR protocol employed in tyrosine suppressor tRNA selection.
After the twelve-hour growth following library
20 21
Adapted pheS negative selection
22
For this adapted pheS negative selection, selection occurred in liquid media rather than on
23
solid agar plates. A tRNA library pool was cloned into pSELt_6x.A vector and transformed
24
into DH10B E. coli with transformation efficiencies of >107 to ensure complete coverage of
25
the theoretical diversity from an initial library.
Following one-hour transformation
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recovery in SOC media, transformed cells were diluted 1:10 in 2xYT media containing
2
kanamycin and shaken overnight at 37°C for no more than twelve hours. After twelve
3
hours, a selection culture was prepared from 4 mL of fresh 2xYT containing 10 mM p-Cl-Phe
4
(Sigma) and kanamycin into which 200 μL of overnight transformation culture was added.
5
This inoculated selection culture was shaken for four hours at 37°C. Next, 0.5 mL of this
6
first selection culture was passaged into a second culture tube of 4 mL 2xYT containing 10
7
mM p-Cl-Phe (Sigma) and kanamycin.
8
selection culture was spun down and miniprepped (Qiagen) to recover plasmid.
9
Miniprepped plasmid was used as template for PCR amplification using primers specific to
After another four-hour selection, this second
10
the tRNA cassette from pSELt.
11
restriction digest cloning by BsrGI and KpnI (NEB) for further selection.
PCR amplification product was used as template for
12 13
Design and selection of first-generation tRNA libraries: Ac-Lib and T-Lib
14
Initial libraries, Ac-Lib and T-Lib, were subjected to three rounds of CPR positive selection,
15
one round of pheS negative selection, and a final round of CPR positive selection. During the
16
first two rounds of CPR, library pools were expressed by lpp promoter and tasked with
17
suppressing Taq polymerase containing four amber codons. For the third round of CPR,
18
library pools were expressed by E. coli leuQ tRNA promoter and tasked with suppressing
19
Taq polymerase containing six amber codons. Library pools were then subjected to the
20
adapted pheS negative selection. A final round of CPR was conducted using the selection
21
conditions from round three of CPR. The final library pools were cloned and sequenced.
22 23
Selection of second-generation tRNA library: AcT5S -Lib
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The AcT5S library was subjected to a similar, but more rigorous selection scheme than that
2
used with Ac-Lib and T-Lib. All selections for AcT5S were conducted with library pools
3
were expressed by E. coli leuQ tRNA promoter.
4 5
The first and second rounds of CPR tasked libraries with suppressing Taq polymerase
6
containing six and eight amber codons, respectively. The AcT5S library pool was then
7
subjected to one round of the adapted pheS negative selection. Two more rounds of CPR
8
selection were conducted with AcT5S library pool tasked with suppressing Taq polymerase
9
containing ten amber codons. The final library pool was cloned and sequenced.
10 11
Design and selection of third-generation tRNA libraries: S7-TA
12
Due to its smaller library size, the S7-TA library was only subjected to two rounds of CPR
13
positive selection. Each round tasked library pools with suppressing Taq polymerase
14
containing ten amber codons. Furthermore, three separate selections of the S7-TA library
15
were run in parallel with the three 3-halo-tyrosines: 3-chloro-tyrosine (3-Cl-Y), 3-bromo-
16
tyrosine (3-Br-Y), and 3-iodo-tyrosine (3-I-Y).
17 18
During the first round of CPR, selection of S7-TA followed the above-described protocol for
19
3-halo-tyrosine suppressor tRNA selection. However, during the second round of CPR, the
20
post-induction expression time was reduced from three hours to one hour in order to
21
increase selection stringency.
22
suppression activity screens. For each 3-halo-Y library pool, the activities of single colony
23
picks were assayed in comparison to tRNAoptCUA. The top eight picks from each 3-halo-Y
24
selection were sequenced and rescreened in triplicate to confirm tRNA performance. The
25
top two tRNA variants from each 3-halo-Y selection were used in further analyses.
The final library pools were cloned and subjected to
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Orthogonality assay protocol
3
Using chemically competent BL21(DE3) E. coli, transformations were conducted with the
4
reporter plasmid pACYCSolo_sFastGFP-1xAmb and pBRIVTC3B plasmid expressing the
5
tRNA variant to be assayed. Control samples resulted from the same double plasmid
6
transformation with the reporter plasmid pACYCSolo_sFastGFP-1xAmb and pBR322 lacking
7
a tRNA expression cassette. All transformations were plated on 2xYT agar petri dishes
8
containing ampicillin and chloramphenicol.
9 10
Using a 96-well 2 mL plate (Fisher), three distinct colonies from each sample petri dish
11
were picked into 1 mL of 2xYT media containing 2% glucose as well as ampicillin and
12
chloramphenicol. The 96-well plate was sealed with AirPore Tape (Qiagen) and shaken at
13
37°C for twelve hours. After twelve hours, 50 μL of the overnight culture was used to
14
inoculate 1 mL of fresh 2xYT media containing ampicillin and chloramphenicol in a new 96-
15
well 2 mL plate. The new plate was sealed with AirPore Tape and shaken at 37°C for one
16
hour. After one hour, assay cultures were induced by adding IPTG to each 1 mL culture for a
17
final concentration of 1 mM IPTG. Following induction with IPTG, the plate was seal with
18
AirPore Tape and shaken at 37°C for three hours.
19 20
After IPTG induction and expression, the assay plate was spun down (20 min, 3000g, 4°C)
21
and washed twice with 1xPBS. Next, 200 μL from each resuspended sample were pipetted
22
into a Costar Assay Plate, 96 Well Black with Clear Flat Bottom (Corning). Three wells with
23
200 μL 1xPBS served as a buffer or blank control. Measurements were taken with the
24
Infinite® 200 PRO plate reader (Tecan). Costar Assay Plate was gently shaken (3.5 mm
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1
orbital amplitude) for ten seconds before measuring cell density with absorbance at 600 nm
2
(OD600) and in cell sFastGFP fluorescence intensity (Exc/Em: 485/528).
3 4
Tyrosine suppression efficiency assay protocol
5
Using chemically competent BL21(DE3) E. coli, transformations were conducted with the
6
reporter plasmid pACYCSolo_sFastGFP-3xAmb as well as pRST plasmid expressing both
7
wild type Mj tyrosyl-tRNA synthetase and the tRNA variant to be assayed. Negative control
8
samples resulted from the same double plasmid transformation with the reporter plasmid
9
pACYCSolo_sFastGFP-3xAmb and pBR322. Positive control samples resulted from double
10
plasmid transformation with reporter plasmid pACYCSolo_sFastGFP and pBR322.
11
transformations were plated on 2xYT agar petri dishes containing ampicillin and
12
chloramphenicol.
All
13 14
Following transformation of the above-mentioned plasmids with proper controls, the
15
tyrosine suppression efficiency assay was conducted with the same protocol employed in
16
the orthogonality assay.
17 18
Non-canonical incorporating suppression efficiency assay protocol
19
Using chemically competent BL21(DE3) E. coli, transformations were conducted with the
20
reporter plasmid pACYCSolo_sFastGFP-3xAmb as well as pRST plasmid expressing both 3-
21
iodo-tyrosine incorporating Mj synthetase and the tRNA variant to be assayed. Negative
22
control samples resulted from the same double plasmid transformation with the reporter
23
plasmid pACYCSolo_sFastGFP-3xAmb and pBR322.
24
without ambers were excluded from non-canonical incorporating suppression efficiency
25
assays. Instead, the relative activities of tRNA variants were compared to one another. All
Positive controls using sFastGFP
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transformations were plated on 2xYT agar petri dishes containing ampicillin and
2
chloramphenicol.
3 4
Following transformation of the above-mentioned plasmids with proper controls, the non-
5
canonical incorporating suppression efficiency assay was conducted using the same
6
protocol employed in the orthogonality assay.
7 8
Fitness/Growth Assay protocol
9
DH10B and E. coli C321.ΔA cells containing tRNA expression plasmids (pBRIVTC3B
10
expressing variant tRNAs) or a pBR322 derivative lacking a tRNA expression cassette were
11
cultured overnight from single colonies. Cultures were diluted 1:100 and 10 μL used to
12
inoculate 200 μL fresh media in a 96-well Black with Clear Flat Bottom plate (Costar).
13
Following inoculation, cultures were sealed with Breathe-Easy sealing membrane (Sigma
14
Aldrich) and incubated at 37 °C with agitation (5 mm linear amplitude) in a preheated plate
15
reader (Infinite 200 PRO, Tecan). OD600 measurements were taken every 900 seconds for a
16
period of 16.5 hours.
17 18
Supporting Information
19
Pertinent tRNA sequences (Table S1), agarose gel representing the results of mock CPR
20
positive selections (Figure S1), graphical representation of tRNA variants from first-
21
generation library selections (Figure S2), map of extra-library mutations from tRNA
22
variants from first-generation library selections (Figure S3), graphical table detailing the
23
design of the ten combinatorial variants generated from top tRNA variants of both first-
24
generation library selections (Figure S4), in vivo suppression efficiency and orthogonality
25
assays for combinatorial variants and parental tRNAs (Figure S5), graphical representation
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1
of second-generation library based on AcT.05 (Figure S6), calculated parameters from
2
growth curves fitted with a modified logistic growth model for DH10B and “Amberless”
3
C321.∆A E. coli (Table S2), in vivo suppression efficiency assay for most active variants from
4
second-generation library (Figure S7), graphical representation of the mutations for
5
second-generation library variants assayed in Figure S7 (Figure S8), growth assay in DH10B
6
E. coli of most pertinent tRNA variants (Figure S9), proposed library for selecting new tRNA
7
variants for optimizing EF-Tu binding for a given unnatural amino acid (Figure S10), table
8
of pertinent oligos and their sequences (Table S3), table of sequences for codon optimized
9
genes used in selections (Table S4), nucleotide sequence for pSELt plasmid with tRNAoptCUA
10
(Table S5), plasmid map for pSELt with tRNAoptCUA (Figure S11)
11 12
Abbreviations
13
Orthogonal translation system (OTS), tRNA synthetase (RS), aminoacyl-tRNA synthetase
14
(aaRS), compartmentalized partnered replication (CPR), non-canonical amino acid (ncAA)
15 16
Author Information
17
Corresponding
18
[email protected]. AM designed and executed all selections and screening assays.
19
AM and AE wrote the paper.
Author:
Tel:
(512)
471-6445.
Fax:
(512)
471-7014.
E-mail:
20 21
Acknowledgement
22
The authors declare no competing interests. We thank Dr. Ross Thyer and Dr. Randall
23
Hughes for contributing materials in the form of plasmid constructs. This work by the
24
Welch Foundation (Project # F-1654) and by the Air Force and Department of Defense
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1
through the National Security Science and Engineering Faculty Fellowship (Project #
2
FA9550-10-1-0169) and the Air Force Research Lab AFOSR (Project # FA9550-14-1-0089).
3
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(1) Wang, L., and Schultz, P. G. (2001) A general approach for the generation of orthogonal tRNAs. Chem. Biol. 8, 883–890. (2) Guo, J., Melançon, C. E., Lee, H. S., Groff, D., and Schultz, P. G. (2009) Evolution of amber suppressor tRNAs for efficient bacterial production of proteins containing nonnatural amino acids. Angew. Chem. Int. Ed. Engl. 48, 9148–9151. (3) Young, T. S., Ahmad, I., Yin, J. A., and Schultz, P. G. (2010) An enhanced system for unnatural amino acid mutagenesis in E. coli. J. Mol. Biol. 395, 361–374. (4) Tian, H., Deng, D., Huang, J., Yao, D., Xu, X., and Gao, X. (2013) Screening system for orthogonal suppressor tRNAs based on the species-specific toxicity of suppressor tRNAs. Biochimie 95, 881–888. (5) Kurland, C. G. (1992) Translational accuracy and the fitness of bacteria. Annu. Rev. Genet. 26, 29–50. (6) Wang, Q., Sun, T., Xu, J., Shen, Z., Briggs, S. P., Zhou, D., and Wang, L. (2014) Response and adaptation of Escherichia coli to suppression of the amber stop codon. Chembiochem 15, 1744– 1749. (7) Javahishvili, T., Manibusan, A., Srinagesh, S., Lee, D., Ensari, S., Shimazu, M., and Schultz, P. G. (2014) Role of tRNA orthogonality in an expanded genetic code. ACS Chem. Biol. 9, 874–879. (8) Lajoie, M. J., Rovner, A. J., Goodman, D. B., Aerni, H.-R., Haimovich, A. D., Kuznetsov, G., Mercer, J. A., Wang, H. H., Carr, P. A., Mosberg, J. A., Rohland, N., Schultz, P. G., Jacobson, J. M., Rinehart, J., Church, G. M., and Isaacs, F. J. (2013) Genomically recoded organisms expand biological functions. Science 342, 357–360. (9) Hughes, R. A., and Ellington, A. D. (2010) Rational design of an orthogonal tryptophanyl nonsense suppressor tRNA. Nucleic Acids Res. 38, 6813–6830. (10) Ellefson, J. W., Meyer, A. J., Hughes, R. A., Cannon, J. R., Brodbelt, J. S., and Ellington, A. D. (2014) Directed evolution of genetic parts and circuits by compartmentalized partnered replication. Nat. Biotechnol. 32, 97–101. (11) Wang, N., Ju, T., Niu, W., and Guo, J. (2015) Fine-tuning interaction between aminoacyltRNA synthetase and tRNA for efficient synthesis of proteins containing unnatural amino acids. ACS Synth Biol 4, 207–212. (12) Kast, P. (1994) pKSS--a second-generation general purpose cloning vector for efficient positive selection of recombinant clones. Gene 138, 109–114. (13) Dutta, T., Malhotra, A., and Deutscher, M. P. (2013) How a CCA sequence protects mature tRNAs and tRNA precursors from action of the processing enzyme RNase BN/RNase Z. J. Biol. Chem. 288, 30636–30644. (14) de Duve, C. (1988, May 12) Transfer RNAs: the second genetic code. Nature. (15) Hou, Y. M., and Schimmel, P. (1989) Evidence that a major determinant for the identity of a transfer RNA is conserved in evolution. Biochemistry 28, 6800–6804. (16) Naganuma, M., Sekine, S.-I., Chong, Y. E., Guo, M., Yang, X.-L., Gamper, H., Hou, Y.-M., Schimmel, P., and Yokoyama, S. (2014) The selective tRNA aminoacylation mechanism based on a single G•U pair. Nature 510, 507–511. (17) Alexander, R. W., Eargle, J., and Luthey-Schulten, Z. (2010) Experimental and computational determination of tRNA dynamics. FEBS Lett. 584, 376–386. (18) Guigou, L., and Mirande, M. (2005) Determinants in tRNA for activation of arginyl-tRNA synthetase: evidence that tRNA flexibility is required for the induced-fit mechanism.
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Biochemistry 44, 16540–16548. (19) Eargle, J., Black, A. A., Sethi, A., Trabuco, L. G., and Luthey-Schulten, Z. (2008) Dynamics of Recognition between tRNA and elongation factor Tu. J. Mol. Biol. 377, 1382–1405. (20) Schrader, J. M., Chapman, S. J., and Uhlenbeck, O. C. (2009) Understanding the sequence specificity of tRNA binding to elongation factor Tu using tRNA mutagenesis. J. Mol. Biol. 386, 1255–1264. (21) Sakamoto, K., Murayama, K., Oki, K., Iraha, F., Kato-Murayama, M., Takahashi, M., Ohtake, K., Kobayashi, T., Kuramitsu, S., Shirouzu, M., and Yokoyama, S. (2009) Genetic encoding of 3iodo-L-tyrosine in Escherichia coli for single-wavelength anomalous dispersion phasing in protein crystallography. Structure 17, 335–344. (22) Saks, M. E., Sanderson, L. E., Choi, D. S., Crosby, C. M., and Uhlenbeck, O. C. (2011) Functional consequences of T-stem mutations in E. coli tRNAThrUGU in vitro and in vivo. RNA 17, 1038–1047. (23) Schrader, J. M., Chapman, S. J., and Uhlenbeck, O. C. (2011) Tuning the affinity of aminoacyl-tRNA to elongation factor Tu for optimal decoding. Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U.S.A. 108, 5215–5220. (24) Ohtake, K., Yamaguchi, A., Mukai, T., Kashimura, H., Hirano, N., Haruki, M., Kohashi, S., Yamagishi, K., Murayama, K., Tomabechi, Y., Itagaki, T., Akasaka, R., Kawazoe, M., Takemoto, C., Shirouzu, M., Yokoyama, S., and Sakamoto, K. (2015) Protein stabilization utilizing a redefined codon. Sci Rep 5, 9762. (25) Nissen, P., Thirup, S., Kjeldgaard, M., and Nyborg, J. (1999) The crystal structure of CystRNACys-EF-Tu-GDPNP reveals general and specific features in the ternary complex and in tRNA. Structure 7, 143–156. (26) Fan, C., Xiong, H., Reynolds, N. M., and Söll, D. (2015) Rationally evolving tRNAPyl for efficient incorporation of noncanonical amino acids. Nucleic Acids Res. gkv800. (27) Zwietering, M. H., Jongenburger, I., Rombouts, F. M., and van 't Riet, K. (1990) Modeling of the bacterial growth curve. Appl. Environ. Microbiol. 56, 1875–1881. (28) van der Gulik, P. T. S., and Hoff, W. D. (2011) Unassigned codons, nonsense suppression, and anticodon modifications in the evolution of the genetic code. J. Mol. Evol. 73, 59–69. (29) Fisher, A. C., and DeLisa, M. P. (2008) Laboratory evolution of fast-folding green fluorescent protein using secretory pathway quality control. PLoS ONE 3, e2351. (30) Thyer, R., Filipovska, A., and Rackham, O. (2013) Engineered rRNA enhances the efficiency of selenocysteine incorporation during translation. J. Am. Chem. Soc. 135, 2–5.
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Abstract Graphic 114x78mm (300 x 300 DPI)
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General schematic representing compartmentalized partnered replication (CPR) as a two-plasmid system. In this scheme, the function of the partnered gene (green and red boxes) is coupled to the expression of Taq polymerase forming an inducible genetic circuit. The partnered gene is represented as a diverse library pool of varying activity (red indicates low or nonfunctional, green color indicates higher activity). The library pool for a partner gene is cloned into its corresponding expression plasmid and transformed into E. coli bearing the Taq polymerase expression plasmid. Overnight culture is used to inoculate fresh media containing all components necessary for the selection. Then the genetic circuit is induced and allowed to express for some time. Cells with functional or higher activity partnered gene variants will produce more Taq polymerase whereas cells with nonfunctional partnered genes will not produce any Taq polymerase. Following expression, cells are washed, resuspended in a PCR mix containing primers for amplification of the partnered gene, and emulsified in an oil/surfactant mixture. The resulting emulsions are thermocycled. A bacterial cell bearing a functional or higher activity partnered gene will release expressed Taq polymerase into its emulsion bubble allowing amplification of that partnered gene variant. No amplification will occur in the emulsion bubble of a bacterial cell bearing a nonfunctional partnered gene as it did not express Taq polymerase. In this manner, functional and higher activity variants of the partnered gene are greatly enriched during each round of CPR selection. 86x61mm (300 x 300 DPI)
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Characterization of selected tyrosine suppressor tRNAs. (A) Structure and sequence for tRNAoptCUA flanked by segments representing the randomized sequences from first-generation libraries: Ac-Lib (lower-left) & TLib (upper-right). (B) Variant AcT.05 tRNA. This tRNA is labeled to demonstrate mutations that derived from Ac-Lib (blue) and T-Lib (yellow) libraries, as well as non-library mutations (orange) that arose. Dark shading indicates nucleotide changes while light shading indicates randomized nucleotides that reverted to the original tRNAoptCUA sequence. (C) Variant S7 tRNA. Coloring indicates mutations that derived from Ac-Lib (blue), T-Lib (yellow), and AcT5S (green) libraries. Dark shading indicates nucleotide changes while light shading indicates randomized nucleotides that reverted to the tRNAoptCUA sequence. (D) In vivo suppression by evolved tyrosine tRNAs and their progenitor, tRNAoptCUA, with the fluorescent reporter sFastGFP containing three amber codons. Values represent the averages of triplicate RFU/OD600 readings with error bars representing standard errors. All measurements and errors have been normalized to the wild-type sFastGFP that contained no amber codons. (E) Orthogonality assay for evolved tyrosine tRNAs and their progenitor, tRNAoptCUA, using the fluorescent reporter sFastGFP containing one amber codon. Values represent the
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averages of triplicate RFU/OD600 readings with error bars representing standard errors. All values have been normalized to the pBR322 control. 155x228mm (300 x 300 DPI)
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Characterization of halo-tyrosine suppressor tRNAs. (A) S7-TA library based on variant S7. The structure is labeled with tRNAoptCUA reversions (beige), mutations maintained from previous selections (grey), and randomized positions (red). (B) Proposed S7-TA2 library based on the results from selections with the S7TA library for 3-halo-tyrosine incorporation. The structure is labeled with tRNAoptCUA reversions (beige), mutations maintained from previous selections (grey), and randomized positions (red). (C) Acceptor stem and T-arm sequences for the S7-TA library and the five 3-halo-tyrosine incorporating tRNAs variants. Each tRNA name has been color-coded to indicate the selection from which it was isolated: 3-I-Y (purple), 3-Br-Y (red), and 3-Cl-Y (green). (D) Suppression assay for 3-halo-tyrosine incorporation with the fluorescent reporter sFastGFP containing three amber codons. Each tRNA variant was assayed in the presence of 3iodo-tyrosine (purple), 3-bromo-tyrosine (red), and 3-chloro-tyrosine (green). Values represent the average of three samples measuring RFU/OD600 with error bars representing standard errors. All values were normalized to those obtained for tRNAoptCUA. (E) Orthogonality assay for the five 3-halo-tyrosine incorporating tRNAs and comparable tyrosine suppressor tRNAs (S7, Nap1 and tRNAoptCUA) using the fluorescent reporter sFastGFP containing one amber codon. Values represent the averages of triplicate RFU/OD600 readings with error bars representing standard errors. All values were normalized to the pBR322 control. 152x135mm (300 x 300 DPI)
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Growth assays for tRNA variants expressed without a paired aaRS under the control of the leuQ promoter. Assays were conducted in DH10B (A) and “Amberless” C321.∆A E. coli (B) grown in 2xYT media. Black diamonds indicate growth in the presence of the control plasmid pBR322 containing no tRNA expression cassette. Blue circles indicate the expression of Nap1. Red squares indicate the expression of tRNAoptCUA. Green triangles indicate the expression of tRNA variant S7. Error bars show the standard deviations for triplicate assays. 96x137mm (300 x 300 DPI)
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Growth assays in DH10B with wild-type and halotyrosine-incorporating amino acyl tRNA synthetases. Each growth assay is arranged in a grid format whereby the media conditions vary for each row and the columns indicate which Mj synthetase variant was expressed. The top row represents growth in 2xYT media. The middle row represents growth in 2xYT media with 2% glucose. The bottom row represents growth in 2xYT media with 0.1 mM IPTG. Each synthetase was expressed with the tacI promoter and the tRNA variants were expressed under the control of the leuQ promoter. The left-hand column are experiments with the wild-type MjYRS and the right-hand column are experiments with a Mj synthetase variant capable of incorporating 3-halo-tyrosines21. Blue circles indicate growth with expression of Nap1. Red squares indicate growth with expression of tRNAoptCUA. Green triangles indicate growth with expression of tRNA variant S7. 150x169mm (300 x 300 DPI)
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Growth assays in C321.∆A with wild-type and halotyrosine-incorporating amino acyl tRNA synthetases. The layout is as in Figure 5. 151x168mm (300 x 300 DPI)
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