TY - JOUR
T1 - Engineering Transcription Factor BmoR Mutants for Constructing Multifunctional Alcohol Biosensors
AU - Wu, Tong
AU - Chen, Zhenya
AU - Guo, Shuyuan
AU - Zhang, Cuiying
AU - Huo, Yi Xin
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2022 American Chemical Society.
PY - 2022/3/18
Y1 - 2022/3/18
N2 - Native transcription factor-based biosensors (TFBs) have the potential for the in situ detection of value-added chemicals or byproducts. However, their industrial application is limited by their ligand promiscuity, low sensitivity, and narrow detection range. Alcohols exhibit similar structures, and no reported TFB can distinguish a specific alcohol from its analogues. Here, we engineered an alcohol-regulated transcription factor, BmoR, and obtained various mutants with remarkable properties. For example, the generated signal-molecule-specific BmoRs could distinguish the constitutional isomers n-butanol and isobutanol, with insensitivity up to an ethanol concentration of 800 mM (36.9 g/L). Linear detection of 0-60 mM of a specific higher alcohol could be achieved in the presence of up to 500 mM (23.0 g/L) ethanol as background noise. Furthermore, we obtained two mutants with raised outputs and over 107-fold higher sensitivity and one mutant with an increased upper detection limit (14.8 g/L n-butanol or isobutanol). Using BmoR as an example, this study systematically explored the ultimate detection limit of a TFB toward its small-molecule ligands, paving the way for in situ detection in biofuel and wine industries.
AB - Native transcription factor-based biosensors (TFBs) have the potential for the in situ detection of value-added chemicals or byproducts. However, their industrial application is limited by their ligand promiscuity, low sensitivity, and narrow detection range. Alcohols exhibit similar structures, and no reported TFB can distinguish a specific alcohol from its analogues. Here, we engineered an alcohol-regulated transcription factor, BmoR, and obtained various mutants with remarkable properties. For example, the generated signal-molecule-specific BmoRs could distinguish the constitutional isomers n-butanol and isobutanol, with insensitivity up to an ethanol concentration of 800 mM (36.9 g/L). Linear detection of 0-60 mM of a specific higher alcohol could be achieved in the presence of up to 500 mM (23.0 g/L) ethanol as background noise. Furthermore, we obtained two mutants with raised outputs and over 107-fold higher sensitivity and one mutant with an increased upper detection limit (14.8 g/L n-butanol or isobutanol). Using BmoR as an example, this study systematically explored the ultimate detection limit of a TFB toward its small-molecule ligands, paving the way for in situ detection in biofuel and wine industries.
KW - BmoR
KW - biosensor
KW - high sensitivity
KW - specificity
KW - transcription factor
KW - wider detection
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85125386595&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1021/acssynbio.1c00549
DO - 10.1021/acssynbio.1c00549
M3 - Article
C2 - 35175734
AN - SCOPUS:85125386595
SN - 2161-5063
VL - 11
SP - 1251
EP - 1260
JO - ACS Synthetic Biology
JF - ACS Synthetic Biology
IS - 3
ER -