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Featured researches published by Jaymin R. Patel.


Nucleic Acids Research | 2015

Multilayered genetic safeguards limit growth of microorganisms to defined environments

Ryan R. Gallagher; Jaymin R. Patel; Alexander L. Interiano; Alexis J. Rovner; Farren J. Isaacs

Genetically modified organisms (GMOs) are commonly used to produce valuable compounds in closed industrial systems. However, their emerging applications in open clinical or environmental settings require enhanced safety and security measures. Intrinsic biocontainment, the creation of bacterial hosts unable to survive in natural environments, remains a major unsolved biosafety problem. We developed a new biocontainment strategy containing overlapping ‘safeguards’—engineered riboregulators that tightly control expression of essential genes, and an engineered addiction module based on nucleases that cleaves the host genome—to restrict viability of Escherichia coli cells to media containing exogenously supplied synthetic small molecules. These multilayered safeguards maintain robust growth in permissive conditions, eliminate persistence and limit escape frequencies to <1.3 × 10−12. The staged approach to safeguard implementation revealed mechanisms of escape and enabled strategies to overcome them. Our safeguarding strategy is modular and employs conserved mechanisms that could be extended to clinically or industrially relevant organisms and undomesticated species.


Current Opinion in Chemical Biology | 2015

Repurposing the translation apparatus for synthetic biology

Benjamin J. Des Soye; Jaymin R. Patel; Farren J. Isaacs; Michael C. Jewett

The translation system (the ribosome and associated factors) is the cells factory for protein synthesis. The extraordinary catalytic capacity of the protein synthesis machinery has driven extensive efforts to harness it for novel functions. For example, pioneering efforts have demonstrated that it is possible to genetically encode more than the 20 natural amino acids and that this encoding can be a powerful tool to expand the chemical diversity of proteins. Here, we discuss recent advances in efforts to expand the chemistry of living systems, highlighting improvements to the molecular machinery and genomically recoded organisms, applications of cell-free systems, and extensions of these efforts to include eukaryotic systems. The transformative potential of repurposing the translation apparatus has emerged as one of the defining opportunities at the interface of chemical and synthetic biology.


Nature Communications | 2018

Cell-free protein synthesis from genomically recoded bacteria enables multisite incorporation of noncanonical amino acids

Rey W. Martin; Benjamin J. Des Soye; Yong-Chan Kwon; Jennifer Kay; Roderick G. Davis; Paul M. Thomas; Natalia I. Majewska; Cindy X. Chen; Ryan Marcum; Mary Grace Weiss; Ashleigh E. Stoddart; Miriam Amiram; Arnaz K. Ranji Charna; Jaymin R. Patel; Farren J. Isaacs; Neil L. Kelleher; Seok Hoon Hong; Michael C. Jewett

Cell-free protein synthesis has emerged as a powerful approach for expanding the range of genetically encoded chemistry into proteins. Unfortunately, efforts to site-specifically incorporate multiple non-canonical amino acids into proteins using crude extract-based cell-free systems have been limited by release factor 1 competition. Here we address this limitation by establishing a bacterial cell-free protein synthesis platform based on genomically recoded Escherichia coli lacking release factor 1. This platform was developed by exploiting multiplex genome engineering to enhance extract performance by functionally inactivating negative effectors. Our most productive cell extracts enabled synthesis of 1,780 ± 30 mg/L superfolder green fluorescent protein. Using an optimized platform, we demonstrated the ability to introduce 40 identical p-acetyl-l-phenylalanine residues site specifically into an elastin-like polypeptide with high accuracy of incorporation ( ≥ 98%) and yield (96 ± 3 mg/L). We expect this cell-free platform to facilitate fundamental understanding and enable manufacturing paradigms for proteins with new and diverse chemistries.Cell-free protein synthesis allows for producing proteins without the need of a host organism, thus sparing the researcher experimental hassle. Here, the authors developed a cell-free synthesis method that enables incorporating non-standard amino acids in the product.


bioRxiv | 2018

Model colibactins exhibit human cell genotoxicity in the absence of host bacteria

Emilee E. Shine; Mengzhao Xue; Jaymin R. Patel; Alan R. Healy; Yulia V. Surovtseva; Seth B. Herzon; Jason M. Crawford

Colibactins are genotoxic secondary metabolites produced in select Enterobacteriaceae, which induce downstream DNA double-strand breaks (DSBs) in human cell lines and are thought to promote the formation of colorectal tumors. Although key structural and functional features of colibactins have been elucidated, the full molecular mechanisms regulating these phenotypes remain unknown. Here, we demonstrate that free model colibactins induce DSBs in human cell cultures and do not require delivery by host bacteria. Through domain-targeted editing, we demonstrate that a subset of native colibactins generated from observed module skipping in the nonribosomal peptide synthetase-polyketide synthase (NRPS-PKS) biosynthetic assembly line share DNA alkylation phenotypes with the model colibactins in vitro. However, module skipping eliminates the strong DNA interstrand cross-links formed by the wildtype pathway in cell culture. This product diversification during the modular NRPS-PKS biosynthesis produces a family of metabolites with varying observed mechanisms of action – DNA alkylation versus crosslinking – in cell culture. The presence of membranes separating human cells from model colibactins attenuated genotoxicity, suggesting that membrane diffusion limits colibactin activity and could account for the observed bacteria-human cell-to-cell contact phenotype. Additionally, extracellular supplementation of the colibactin resistance protein ClbS was able to intercept colibactins in an E. coli-human cell transient infection model. Our studies demonstrate that free model colibactins recapitulate cellular phenotypes associated with moduleskipped products in the native colibactin pathway and define specific protein domains that are required for efficient DNA interstrand crosslinking in the native pathway.


Journal of Organic Chemistry | 2018

β-Lactam Biotransformations Activate Innate Immunity

Joonseok Oh; Jaymin R. Patel; Hyun Bong Park; Jason M. Crawford

Antibiotics are widely prescribed to treat bacterial infections, but many of these drugs also affect patient immune responses. While the molecular mechanisms regulating these diverse immunomodulatory interactions are largely unknown, recent studies support two primary models: (1) antibiotics can alter immune function by directly interacting with human targets; and/or (2) antibiotics can indirectly affect immune responses via alteration of the human microbiota composition. Here, we describe results that could support a third model in which a nonimmunostimulatory antibiotic can be biotransformed by human microbiota members into an immunostimulatory product that lacks antibacterial activity. Specifically, we identified, characterized, and semisynthesized new biotransformation products derived from the β-lactams amoxicillin and ampicillin, antibiotics regularly prescribed in the clinic. The drug metabolism products were identified in bacterial cultures harboring β-lactamase, a common resistance determinant. One of the amoxicillin biotransformation products activated innate immunity, as assessed by NF-κB signaling in human leukemic monocytes, whereas amoxicillin itself exhibited no effect. Amoxicillin has previously been shown to have minimal long-term impact on human microbiota composition in clinical trial studies. Taken together, our results could support a broader immunomodulatory mechanism whereby antibiotics could indirectly regulate immune function in a stable, microbiome-dependent manner.


Nature | 2015

Corrigendum: Recoded organisms engineered to depend on synthetic amino acids

Alexis J. Rovner; Adrian D. Haimovich; Spencer R. Katz; Zhe Li; Michael W. Grome; Brandon M. Gassaway; Miriam Amiram; Jaymin R. Patel; Ryan R. Gallagher; Jesse Rinehart; Farren J. Isaacs

This corrects the article DOI: 10.1038/nature14095


Immunity | 2011

Germinal center B cell and T follicular helper cell development initiates in the interfollicular zone.

Steven M. Kerfoot; Gur Yaari; Jaymin R. Patel; Kody L. Johnson; David Gonzalez; Steven H. Kleinstein; Ann M. Haberman


Nature | 2015

Recoded organisms engineered to depend on synthetic amino acids

Alexis J. Rovner; Adrian D. Haimovich; Spencer R. Katz; Zhe Li; Michael W. Grome; Brandon M. Gassaway; Miriam Amiram; Jaymin R. Patel; Ryan R. Gallagher; Jesse Rinehart; Farren J. Isaacs


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2016

A Mechanistic Model for Colibactin-Induced Genotoxicity

Alan R. Healy; Herman Nikolayevskiy; Jaymin R. Patel; Jason M. Crawford; Seth B. Herzon


Biochemistry | 2018

Microbiota-Regulated Outcomes of Human Cancer Immunotherapy via the PD-1/PD-L1 Axis

Jaymin R. Patel; Jason M. Crawford

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