Network


Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where John E. Dueber is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by John E. Dueber.


Nature Biotechnology | 2009

Synthetic protein scaffolds provide modular control over metabolic flux

John E. Dueber; Gabriel C. Wu; G Reza Malmirchegini; Tae Seok Moon; Christopher J. Petzold; Adeeti V Ullal; Kristala L. J. Prather; Jay D. Keasling

Engineered metabolic pathways constructed from enzymes heterologous to the production host often suffer from flux imbalances, as they typically lack the regulatory mechanisms characteristic of natural metabolism. In an attempt to increase the effective concentration of each component of a pathway of interest, we built synthetic protein scaffolds that spatially recruit metabolic enzymes in a designable manner. Scaffolds bearing interaction domains from metazoan signaling proteins specifically accrue pathway enzymes tagged with their cognate peptide ligands. The natural modularity of these domains enabled us to optimize the stoichiometry of three mevalonate biosynthetic enzymes recruited to a synthetic complex and thereby achieve 77-fold improvement in product titer with low enzyme expression and reduced metabolic load. One of the same scaffolds was used to triple the yield of glucaric acid, despite high titers (0.5 g/l) without the synthetic complex. These strategies should prove generalizeable to other metabolic pathways and programmable for fine-tuning pathway flux.


Cell | 2015

Engineering Complex Synthetic Transcriptional Programs with CRISPR RNA Scaffolds

Jesse G. Zalatan; Michael E. Lee; Ricardo Almeida; Luke A. Gilbert; Evan H. Whitehead; Marie La Russa; Jordan C. Tsai; Jonathan S. Weissman; John E. Dueber; Lei S. Qi; Wendell A. Lim

Eukaryotic cells execute complex transcriptional programs in which specific loci throughout the genome are regulated in distinct ways by targeted regulatory assemblies. We have applied this principle to generate synthetic CRISPR-based transcriptional programs in yeast and human cells. By extending guide RNAs to include effector protein recruitment sites, we construct modular scaffold RNAs that encode both target locus and regulatory action. Sets of scaffold RNAs can be used to generate synthetic multigene transcriptional programs in which some genes are activated and others are repressed. We apply this approach to flexibly redirect flux through a complex branched metabolic pathway in yeast. Moreover, these programs can be executed by inducing expression of the dCas9 protein, which acts as a single master regulatory control point. CRISPR-associated RNA scaffolds provide a powerful way to construct synthetic gene expression programs for a wide range of applications, including rewiring cell fates or engineering metabolic pathways.


Journal of Biological Engineering | 2010

BglBricks: A flexible standard for biological part assembly

JChristopher Anderson; John E. Dueber; Mariana Leguia; Gabriel C. Wu; Jonathan A. Goler; Adam P. Arkin; Jay D. Keasling

BackgroundStandard biological parts, such as BioBricks™ parts, provide the foundation for a new engineering discipline that enables the design and construction of synthetic biological systems with a variety of applications in bioenergy, new materials, therapeutics, and environmental remediation. Although the original BioBricks™ assembly standard has found widespread use, it has several shortcomings that limit its range of potential applications. In particular, the system is not suitable for the construction of protein fusions due to an unfavorable scar sequence that encodes an in-frame stop codon.ResultsHere, we present a similar but new composition standard, called BglBricks, that addresses the scar translation issue associated with the original standard. The new system employs BglII and BamHI restriction enzymes, robust cutters with an extensive history of use, and results in a 6-nucleotide scar sequence encoding glycine-serine, an innocuous peptide linker in most protein fusion applications. We demonstrate the utility of the new standard in three distinct applications, including the construction of constitutively active gene expression devices with a wide range of expression profiles, the construction of chimeric, multi-domain protein fusions, and the targeted integration of functional DNA sequences into specific loci of the E. coli genome.ConclusionsThe BglBrick standard provides a new, more flexible platform from which to generate standard biological parts and automate DNA assembly. Work on BglBrick assembly reactions, as well as on the development of automation and bioinformatics tools, is currently underway. These tools will provide a foundation from which to transform genetic engineering from a technically intensive art into a purely design-based discipline.


Nucleic Acids Research | 2012

DNA-guided assembly of biosynthetic pathways promotes improved catalytic efficiency

Robert J. Conrado; Gabriel C. Wu; Jason T. Boock; Hansen Xu; Susan Y. Chen; Tina Lebar; Jernej Turnšek; Nejc Tomšič; Monika Avbelj; Rok Gaber; Tomaž Koprivnjak; Jerneja Mori; Vesna Glavnik; Irena Vovk; Mojca Benčina; Vesna Hodnik; Gregor Anderluh; John E. Dueber; Roman Jerala; Matthew P. DeLisa

Synthetic scaffolds that permit spatial and temporal organization of enzymes in living cells are a promising post-translational strategy for controlling the flow of information in both metabolic and signaling pathways. Here, we describe the use of plasmid DNA as a stable, robust and configurable scaffold for arranging biosynthetic enzymes in the cytoplasm of Escherichia coli. This involved conversion of individual enzymes into custom DNA-binding proteins by genetic fusion to zinc-finger domains that specifically bind unique DNA sequences. When expressed in cells that carried a rationally designed DNA scaffold comprising corresponding zinc finger binding sites, the titers of diverse metabolic products, including resveratrol, 1,2-propanediol and mevalonate were increased as a function of the scaffold architecture. These results highlight the utility of DNA scaffolds for assembling biosynthetic enzymes into functional metabolic structures. Beyond metabolism, we anticipate that DNA scaffolds may be useful in sequestering different types of enzymes for specifying the output of biological signaling pathways or for coordinating other assembly-line processes such as protein folding, degradation and post-translational modifications.


Metabolic Engineering | 2012

Spatial organization of enzymes for metabolic engineering.

Hanson Lee; William C. DeLoache; John E. Dueber

As synthetic pathways built from exogenous enzymes become more complicated, the probability of encountering undesired interactions with host organisms increases, thereby lowering product titer. An emerging strategy to combat this problem is to spatially organize pathway enzymes into multi-protein complexes, where high local concentrations of enzymes and metabolites may enhance flux and limit problematic interactions with the cellular milieu. Co-localizing enzymes using synthetic scaffolds has improved titers for multiple pathways. While lacking physical diffusion barriers, scaffolded systems could concentrate intermediates locally through a mechanism analogous to naturally occurring microdomains. A more direct strategy for compartmentalizing pathway components would be to encapsulate them within protein shells. Several classes of shells have been loaded with exogenous proteins and expressed successfully in industrial hosts. A critical challenge for achieving ideal pathway compartmentalization with protein shells will likely be evolving pores to selectively limit intermediate diffusion. Eventually, these tools should enhance our ability to rationally design metabolic pathways.


eLife | 2014

Selection of chromosomal DNA libraries using a multiplex CRISPR system

Owen W. Ryan; Jeffrey M. Skerker; Matthew J. Maurer; Xin Li; Jordan C. Tsai; Snigdha Poddar; Michael E. Lee; Will DeLoache; John E. Dueber; Adam P. Arkin; Jamie H. D. Cate

The directed evolution of biomolecules to improve or change their activity is central to many engineering and synthetic biology efforts. However, selecting improved variants from gene libraries in living cells requires plasmid expression systems that suffer from variable copy number effects, or the use of complex marker-dependent chromosomal integration strategies. We developed quantitative gene assembly and DNA library insertion into the Saccharomyces cerevisiae genome by optimizing an efficient single-step and marker-free genome editing system using CRISPR-Cas9. With this Multiplex CRISPR (CRISPRm) system, we selected an improved cellobiose utilization pathway in diploid yeast in a single round of mutagenesis and selection, which increased cellobiose fermentation rates by over 10-fold. Mutations recovered in the best cellodextrin transporters reveal synergy between substrate binding and transporter dynamics, and demonstrate the power of CRISPRm to accelerate selection experiments and discoveries of the molecular determinants that enhance biomolecule function. DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.7554/eLife.03703.001


Nature Chemical Biology | 2015

An enzyme-coupled biosensor enables (S)-reticuline production in yeast from glucose

William C. DeLoache; Zachary N. Russ; Lauren Narcross; Andrew M Gonzales; John E. Dueber

Benzylisoquinoline alkaloids (BIAs) are a diverse family of plant-specialized metabolites that include the pharmaceuticals codeine and morphine and their derivatives. Microbial synthesis of BIAs holds promise as an alternative to traditional crop-based manufacturing. Here we demonstrate the production of the key BIA intermediate (S)-reticuline from glucose in Saccharomyces cerevisiae. To aid in this effort, we developed an enzyme-coupled biosensor for the upstream intermediate L-3,4-dihydroxyphenylalanine (L-DOPA). Using this sensor, we identified an active tyrosine hydroxylase and improved its L-DOPA yields by 2.8-fold via PCR mutagenesis. Coexpression of DOPA decarboxylase enabled what is to our knowledge the first demonstration of dopamine production from glucose in yeast, with a 7.4-fold improvement in titer obtained for our best mutant enzyme. We extended this pathway to fully reconstitute the seven-enzyme pathway from L-tyrosine to (S)-reticuline. Future work to improve titers and connect these steps with downstream pathway branches, already demonstrated in S. cerevisiae, will enable low-cost production of many high-value BIAs.


Nature Biotechnology | 2007

Engineering synthetic signaling proteins with ultrasensitive input/output control.

John E. Dueber; Ethan A Mirsky; Wendell A. Lim

Many signaling proteins are built from simple, modular components, yet display highly complex signal-processing behavior. Here we explore how modular domains can be used to build an ultrasensitive switch—a nonlinear input/output function that is central to many complex biological behaviors. By systematically altering the number and affinity of modular autoinhibitory interactions, we show that we can predictably convert a simple linear signaling protein into an ultrasensitive switch.


Nucleic Acids Research | 2013

Expression-level optimization of a multi-enzyme pathway in the absence of a high-throughput assay

Michael E. Lee; Anil Aswani; Audrey S. Han; Claire J. Tomlin; John E. Dueber

Engineered metabolic pathways often suffer from flux imbalances that can overburden the cell and accumulate intermediate metabolites, resulting in reduced product titers. One way to alleviate such imbalances is to adjust the expression levels of the constituent enzymes using a combinatorial expression library. Typically, this approach requires high-throughput assays, which are unfortunately unavailable for the vast majority of desirable target compounds. To address this, we applied regression modeling to enable expression optimization using only a small number of measurements. We characterized a set of constitutive promoters in Saccharomyces cerevisiae that spanned a wide range of expression and maintained their relative strengths irrespective of the coding sequence. We used a standardized assembly strategy to construct a combinatorial library and express for the first time in yeast the five-enzyme violacein biosynthetic pathway. We trained a regression model on a random sample comprising 3% of the total library, and then used that model to predict genotypes that would preferentially produce each of the products in this highly branched pathway. This generalizable method should prove useful in engineering new pathways for the sustainable production of small molecules.


ACS Synthetic Biology | 2015

A Highly Characterized Yeast Toolkit for Modular, Multipart Assembly

Michael E. Lee; William C. DeLoache; Bernardo Cervantes; John E. Dueber

Saccharomyces cerevisiae is an increasingly attractive host for synthetic biology because of its long history in industrial fermentations. However, until recently, most synthetic biology systems have focused on bacteria. While there is a wealth of resources and literature about the biology of yeast, it can be daunting to navigate and extract the tools needed for engineering applications. Here we present a versatile engineering platform for yeast, which contains both a rapid, modular assembly method and a basic set of characterized parts. This platform provides a framework in which to create new designs, as well as data on promoters, terminators, degradation tags, and copy number to inform those designs. Additionally, we describe genome-editing tools for making modifications directly to the yeast chromosomes, which we find preferable to plasmids due to reduced variability in expression. With this toolkit, we strive to simplify the process of engineering yeast by standardizing the physical manipulations and suggesting best practices that together will enable more straightforward translation of materials and data from one group to another. Additionally, by relieving researchers of the burden of technical details, they can focus on higher-level aspects of experimental design.

Collaboration


Dive into the John E. Dueber's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Gabriel C. Wu

University of California

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Adam P. Arkin

Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Michael E. Lee

University of California

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Wendell A. Lim

University of California

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge