Nature Chemical Biology | 2021

Circularly permuted LOV2 as a modular photoswitch for optogenetic engineering

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

Abstract


Plant-based photosensors, such as the light-oxygen-voltage sensing domain 2 (LOV2) from oat phototropin 1, can be modularly wired into cell signaling networks to remotely control protein activity and physiological processes. However, the applicability of LOV2 is hampered by the limited choice of available caging surfaces and its preference to accommodate the effector domains downstream of the C-terminal Jα helix. Here, we engineered a set of LOV2 circular permutants (cpLOV2) with additional caging capabilities, thereby expanding the repertoire of genetically encoded photoswitches to accelerate the design of optogenetic devices. We demonstrate the use of cpLOV2-based optogenetic tools to reversibly gate ion channels, antagonize CRISPR–Cas9-mediated genome engineering, control protein subcellular localization, reprogram transcriptional outputs, elicit cell suicide and generate photoactivatable chimeric antigen receptor T cells for inducible tumor cell killing. Our approach is widely applicable for engineering other photoreceptors to meet the growing need of optogenetic tools tailored for biomedical and biotechnological applications. A set of LOV2 circular permutants (cpLOV2) have been engineered to expand the existing optogenetic toolbox. cpLOV2 enables the design of both ON- and OFF-switches to control cell signaling, gene expression, cell fate and cancer immunotherapy.

Volume 17
Pages 915 - 923
DOI 10.1038/s41589-021-00792-9
Language English
Journal Nature Chemical Biology

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