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Dive into the research topics where Ahmad S. Khalil is active.

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Featured researches published by Ahmad S. Khalil.


Nature Biotechnology | 2009

Next-generation synthetic gene networks

Timothy K. Lu; Ahmad S. Khalil; James J. Collins

Synthetic biology is focused on the rational construction of biological systems based on engineering principles. During the fields first decade of development, significant progress has been made in designing biological parts and assembling them into genetic circuits to achieve basic functionalities. These circuits have been used to construct proof-of-principle systems with promising results in industrial and medical applications. However, advances in synthetic biology have been limited by a lack of interoperable parts, techniques for dynamically probing biological systems and frameworks for the reliable construction and operation of complex, higher-order networks. As these challenges are addressed, synthetic biologists will be able to construct useful next-generation synthetic gene networks with real-world applications in medicine, biotechnology, bioremediation and bioenergy.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2014

Antibiotics induce redox-related physiological alterations as part of their lethality

Jeffrey Daniel Martell; Noriko Takahashi; Maarten Vercruysse; Alice Y. Ting; Graham C. Walker; Daniel J. Dwyer; Peter Belenky; Jason H. Yang; I. Cody MacDonald; Tsz Yan Clement Chan; Michael A. Lobritz; Dana Braff; Eric G. Schwarz; Jonathan D. Ye; Mekhala Pati; Paul S. Ralifo; Kyle R. Allison; Ahmad S. Khalil; James J. Collins

Deeper understanding of antibiotic-induced physiological responses is critical to identifying means for enhancing our current antibiotic arsenal. Bactericidal antibiotics with diverse targets have been hypothesized to kill bacteria, in part by inducing production of damaging reactive species. This notion has been supported by many groups but has been challenged recently. Here we robustly test the hypothesis using biochemical, enzymatic, and biophysical assays along with genetic and phenotypic experiments. We first used a novel intracellular H2O2 sensor, together with a chemically diverse panel of fluorescent dyes sensitive to an array of reactive species to demonstrate that antibiotics broadly induce redox stress. Subsequent gene-expression analyses reveal that complex antibiotic-induced oxidative stress responses are distinct from canonical responses generated by supraphysiological levels of H2O2. We next developed a method to quantify cellular respiration dynamically and found that bactericidal antibiotics elevate oxygen consumption, indicating significant alterations to bacterial redox physiology. We further show that overexpression of catalase or DNA mismatch repair enzyme, MutS, and antioxidant pretreatment limit antibiotic lethality, indicating that reactive oxygen species causatively contribute to antibiotic killing. Critically, the killing efficacy of antibiotics was diminished under strict anaerobic conditions but could be enhanced by exposure to molecular oxygen or by the addition of alternative electron acceptors, indicating that environmental factors play a role in killing cells physiologically primed for death. This work provides direct evidence that, downstream of their target-specific interactions, bactericidal antibiotics induce complex redox alterations that contribute to cellular damage and death, thus supporting an evolving, expanded model of antibiotic lethality.


Nature Chemical Biology | 2012

Signaling-mediated bacterial persister formation

Nicole M. Vega; Kyle R. Allison; Ahmad S. Khalil; James J. Collins

Here we show that bacterial communication through indole signaling induces persistence, a phenomenon in which a subset of an isogenic bacterial population tolerates antibiotic treatment. We monitor indole-induced persister formation using microfluidics, and identify the role of oxidative stress and phage-shock pathways in this phenomenon. We propose a model in which indole signaling “inoculates” a bacterial sub-population against antibiotics by activating stress responses, leading to persister formation.


Cell | 2012

A Synthetic Biology Framework for Programming Eukaryotic Transcription Functions

Ahmad S. Khalil; Timothy K. Lu; Caleb J. Bashor; Cherie L. Ramirez; Nora Pyenson; J. Keith Joung; James J. Collins

Eukaryotic transcription factors (TFs) perform complex and combinatorial functions within transcriptional networks. Here, we present a synthetic framework for systematically constructing eukaryotic transcription functions using artificial zinc fingers, modular DNA-binding domains found within many eukaryotic TFs. Utilizing this platform, we construct a library of orthogonal synthetic transcription factors (sTFs) and use these to wire synthetic transcriptional circuits in yeast. We engineer complex functions, such as tunable output strength and transcriptional cooperativity, by rationally adjusting a decomposed set of key component properties, e.g., DNA specificity, affinity, promoter design, protein-protein interactions. We show that subtle perturbations to these properties can transform an individual sTF between distinct roles (activator, cooperative factor, inhibitory factor) within a transcriptional complex, thus drastically altering the signal processing behavior of multi-input systems. This platform provides new genetic components for synthetic biology and enables bottom-up approaches to understanding the design principles of eukaryotic transcriptional complexes and networks.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2015

Antibiotic efficacy is linked to bacterial cellular respiration

Michael A. Lobritz; Peter Belenky; Caroline B. M. Porter; Arnaud Gutierrez; Jason H. Yang; Eric G. Schwarz; Daniel J. Dwyer; Ahmad S. Khalil; James J. Collins

Bacteriostatic and bactericidal antibiotic treatments result in two fundamentally different phenotypic outcomes--the inhibition of bacterial growth or, alternatively, cell death. Most antibiotics inhibit processes that are major consumers of cellular energy output, suggesting that antibiotic treatment may have important downstream consequences on bacterial metabolism. We hypothesized that the specific metabolic effects of bacteriostatic and bactericidal antibiotics contribute to their overall efficacy. We leveraged the opposing phenotypes of bacteriostatic and bactericidal drugs in combination to investigate their activity. Growth inhibition from bacteriostatic antibiotics was associated with suppressed cellular respiration whereas cell death from most bactericidal antibiotics was associated with accelerated respiration. In combination, suppression of cellular respiration by the bacteriostatic antibiotic was the dominant effect, blocking bactericidal killing. Global metabolic profiling of bacteriostatic antibiotic treatment revealed that accumulation of metabolites involved in specific drug target activity was linked to the buildup of energy metabolites that feed the electron transport chain. Inhibition of cellular respiration by knockout of the cytochrome oxidases was sufficient to attenuate bactericidal lethality whereas acceleration of basal respiration by genetically uncoupling ATP synthesis from electron transport resulted in potentiation of the killing effect of bactericidal antibiotics. This work identifies a link between antibiotic-induced cellular respiration and bactericidal lethality and demonstrates that bactericidal activity can be arrested by attenuated respiration and potentiated by accelerated respiration. Our data collectively show that antibiotics perturb the metabolic state of bacteria and that the metabolic state of bacteria impacts antibiotic efficacy.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2008

Kinesin's cover-neck bundle folds forward to generate force

Ahmad S. Khalil; David C. Appleyard; Anna K. Labno; Adrien Georges; Martin Karplus; Angela M. Belcher; Wonmuk Hwang; Matthew J. Lang

Each step of the kinesin motor involves a force-generating molecular rearrangement. Although significant progress has been made in elucidating the broad features of the kinesin mechanochemical cycle, molecular details of the force generation mechanism remain a mystery. Recent molecular dynamics simulations have suggested a mechanism in which the forward drive is produced when the N-terminal cover strand forms a β-sheet with the neck linker to yield the cover-neck bundle. We tested this proposal by comparing optical trapping motility measurements of cover strand mutants with the wild-type. Motility data, as well as kinetic analyses, revealed impairment of the force-generating capacity accompanied by a greater load dependence in the mechanochemical cycle. In particular, a mutant with the cover strand deleted functioned only marginally, despite the fact that the cover strand, the N-terminal “dangling end,” unlike the neck linker and nucleotide-binding pocket, is not involved with any previously considered energy transduction pathway. Furthermore, a constant assisting load, likely in lieu of a power stroke, was shown to rescue forward motility in the cover strand deletion mutant. Our results support a stepping mechanism driven by dynamic cover-neck bundle formation. They also suggest a strategy to generate motors with altered mechanical characteristics by targeting the force-generating element.


Optics Express | 2004

OCT-based arterial elastography: robust estimation exploiting tissue biomechanics

Raymond Chan; Alexandra H. Chau; William Clement Karl; Seemantini K. Nadkarni; Ahmad S. Khalil; Nicusor Iftimia; Milen Shishkov; Guillermo J. Tearney; Mohammad R. Kaazempur-Mofrad; Brett E. Bouma

We present a novel multi-resolution variational framework for vascular optical coherence elastography (OCE). This method exploits prior information about arterial wall biomechanics to produce robust estimates of tissue velocity and strain, reducing the sensitivity of conventional tracking methods to both noise- and strain-induced signal decorrelation. The velocity and strain estimation performance of this new estimator is demonstrated in simulated OCT image sequences and in benchtop OCT scanning of a vascular tissue sample.


Annals of Biomedical Engineering | 2005

Tissue elasticity estimation with optical coherence elastography: toward mechanical characterization of in vivo soft tissue.

Ahmad S. Khalil; Raymond Chan; Alexandra H. Chau; Brett E. Bouma; Mohammad R. K. Mofrad

High-resolution imaging provides a significant means for accurate material modulus estimation and mechanical characterization. Within the realm of in vivo soft tissue characterization, particularly on small biological length scales such as arterial atherosclerotic plaques, optical coherence tomography (OCT) offers a desirable imaging modality with higher spatial resolution and contrast of tissue as compared with intravascular ultrasound (IVUS). Based on recent advances in OCT imaging and elastography, we present a fully integrated system for tissue elasticity reconstruction, and assess the benefits of OCT on the distribution results of four representative tissue block models. We demonstrate accuracy, with displacement residuals on the order of 10−6 mm (more than 3 orders of magnitude less than average calculated displacements), and high-resolution estimates, with the ability to resolve inclusions of 0.15 mm diameter.


Cell | 2014

Using Targeted Chromatin Regulators to Engineer Combinatorial and Spatial Transcriptional Regulation

Albert J. Keung; Caleb J. Bashor; Szilvia Kiriakov; James J. Collins; Ahmad S. Khalil

The transcription of genomic information in eukaryotes is regulated in large part by chromatin. How a diverse array of chromatin regulator (CR) proteins with different functions and genomic localization patterns coordinates chromatin activity to control transcription remains unclear. Here, we take a synthetic biology approach to decipher the complexity of chromatin regulation by studying emergent transcriptional behaviors from engineered combinatorial, spatial, and temporal patterns of individual CRs. We fuse 223 yeast CRs to programmable zinc finger proteins. Site-specific and combinatorial recruitment of CRs to distinct intralocus locations reveals a range of transcriptional logic and behaviors, including synergistic activation, long-range and spatial regulation, and gene expression memory. Comparing these transcriptional behaviors with annotated CR complex and function terms provides design principles for the engineering of transcriptional regulation. This work presents a bottom-up approach to investigating chromatin-mediated transcriptional regulation and introduces chromatin-based components and systems for synthetic biology and cellular engineering.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2007

Single M13 bacteriophage tethering and stretching

Ahmad S. Khalil; Jorge Ferrer; Ricardo R. Brau; Stephen T. Kottmann; Christopher J. Noren; Matthew J. Lang; Angela M. Belcher

The ability to present biomolecules on the highly organized structure of M13 filamentous bacteriophage is a unique advantage. Where previously this viral template was shown to direct the orientation and nucleation of nanocrystals and materials, here we apply it in the context of single-molecule (SM) biophysics. Genetically engineered constructs were used to display different reactive species at each of the filament ends and along the major capsid, and the resulting hetero-functional particles were shown to consistently tether microscopic beads in solution. With this system, we report the development of a SM assay based on M13 bacteriophage. We also report the quantitative characterization of the biopolymers elasticity by using an optical trap with nanometer-scale position resolution. Expanding the fluctuating rod limit of the wormlike chain to incorporate enthalpic polymer stretching yielded a model capable of accurately capturing the full range of extensions. Fits of the force-extension measurements gave a mean persistence length of ≈1,265 nm, lending SM support for a shorter filamentous bacteriophage persistence length than previously thought. Furthermore, a predicted stretching modulus roughly two times that of dsDNA, coupled with the systems linkage versatility and load-bearing capability, makes the M13 template an attractive candidate for use in tethered bead architectures.

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Eli J. Weinberg

Charles Stark Draper Laboratory

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Jeffrey T. Borenstein

Charles Stark Draper Laboratory

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Peter Mack

Massachusetts Institute of Technology

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James J. Collins

Massachusetts Institute of Technology

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Guillermo Garcia-Cardena

Charles Stark Draper Laboratory

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James C. Hsiao

Charles Stark Draper Laboratory

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Malinda M. Tupper

Charles Stark Draper Laboratory

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Albert J. Keung

North Carolina State University

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