SummarySynthetic biology uses living cells as molecular foundries for the biosynthesis of drugs, therapeutic proteins, and other commodities. However, the need for specialized equipment and refrigeration for production and distribution poses a challenge for the delivery of these technologies to the field and to low-resource areas. Here, we present a portable platform that provides the means for on-site, on-demand manufacturing of therapeutics and biomolecules. This flexible system is based on reaction pellets composed of freeze-dried, cell-free transcription and translation machinery, which can be easily hydrated and utilized for biosynthesis through the addition of DNA encoding the desired output. We demonstrate this approach with the manufacture and functional validation of antimicrobial peptides and vaccines, and present combinatorial methods for the production of antibody-conjugates and small molecules. This synthetic biology platform resolves important practical limitations in the production and distribution of therapeutics and molecular tools, both to the developed and developing world.
Significance Inorganic phosphate (Pi) is an essential component of many biological molecules and thus is required by all life forms. However, soluble Pi is typically at low abundance in the environment. To compensate, microbes have evolved unique carbon–phosphorus-bond cleaving reactions to use organophosphonates as an alternative source of Pi. The marine-derived enzyme PhnZ utilizes a new oxidative mechanism for CP bond cleavage involving iron and molecular oxygen. The three-dimensional structure of PhnZ reveals unique active site features that contribute to catalysis of CP bond cleavage and substrate specificity, as well as an evolutionary link between phosphodiester bond hydrolysis and oxidative bond cleavage. This evolutionary link likely reflects the ancient origins of organophosphonates in the environment.
The sequential activities of PhnY, an α-ketoglutarate/Fe(II)-dependent dioxygenase, and PhnZ, a Fe(II)-dependent enzyme of the histidine-aspartate motif hydrolase family, cleave the carbon-phosphorus bond of the organophosphonate natural product 2-aminoethylphosphonic acid. PhnY adds a hydroxyl group to the α-carbon, yielding 2-amino-1-hydroxyethylphosphonic acid, which is oxidatively converted by PhnZ to inorganic phosphate and glycine. The PhnZ reaction represents a new enzyme mechanism for metabolic cleavage of a carbon-phosphorus bond.
In Escherichia coli , internalization and catabolism of organophosphonicacids are governed by the 14-cistron phnCDEFGHIJKLMNOP operon. The phnP gene product was previously shown to encode a phosphodiesterase with unusual specificity toward ribonucleoside 2',3'-cyclic phosphates. Furthermore, phnP displays shared synteny with phnN across bacterial phn operons. Here the role of PhnP was examined by (31)P NMR spectrometry on the culture supernatants of E. coli phn mutants grown in the presence of alkylphosphonic acid or phosphite. The addition of any of these alkylphosphonic acids or phosphite resulted in the accumulation of α-D-ribosyl 1,2-cyclic phosphate and α-D-ribosyl 1-alkylphosphonate in a phnP mutant strain. Additionally, α-D-ribosyl 1-ethylphosphonate was observed to accumulate in a phnJ mutant strain when it was fed ethylphosphonic acid. Purified PhnP was shown to regiospecifically convert α-D-ribosyl 1,2-cyclic phosphate to α-D-ribosyl 1-phosphate. Radiolabeling studies revealed that 5-phospho-α-D-ribosyl 1,2-cyclic phosphate also accumulates in a phnP mutant. This compound was synthesized and shown to be regiospecifically converted by PhnP to α-D-ribosyl 1,5-bisphosphate. It is also shown that organophosphonate catabolism is dependent on the synthesis of 5-phospho-α-D-ribosyl 1-diphosphate, suggesting that this phosphoribosyl donor is used to initiate the carbon-phosphorus (CP) lyase pathway. The results show that 5-phospho-α-D-ribosyl 1,2-cyclic phosphate is an intermediate of organophosphonic acid catabolism, and it is proposed that this compound derives from C-P bond cleavage of 5-phospho-α-D-ribosyl 1-alkylphosphonates by CP lyase.
Organophosphonate utilization by Escherichia coli requires the 14 cistrons of the phnCDEFGHIJKLMNOP operon, of which the carbon-phosphorus lyase has been postulated to consist of the seven polypeptides specified by phnG to phnM . A 5,660-bp DNA fragment encompassing phnGHIJKLM is cloned, followed by expression in E. coli and purification of Phn-polypeptides. PhnG, PhnH, PhnI, PhnJ, and PhnK copurify as a protein complex by ion-exchange, size-exclusion, and affinity chromatography. The five polypeptides also comigrate in native-PAGE. Cross-linking of the purified protein complex reveals a close proximity of PhnG, PhnI, PhnJ, and PhnK, as these subunits disappear concomitant with the formation of large cross-linked protein complexes. Two molecular forms are identified, a major form of molecular mass of approximately 260 kDa, a minor form of approximately 640 kDa. The stoichiometry of the protein complex is suggested to be PhnG 4 H 2 I 2 J 2 K. Deletion of individual phn genes reveals that a strain harboring plasmid-borne phnGHIJ produces a protein complex consisting of PhnG, PhnH, PhnI, and PhnJ, whereas a strain harboring plasmid-borne phnGIJK produces a protein complex consisting of PhnG and PhnI. We conclude that phnGHIJK specify a soluble multisubunit protein complex essential for organophosphonate utilization.
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