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Dive into the research topics where Michela Casanova is active.

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Featured researches published by Michela Casanova.


Journal of Biological Engineering | 2014

Half-life measurements of chemical inducers for recombinant gene expression.

Nicolò Politi; Lorenzo Pasotti; Susanna Zucca; Michela Casanova; Giuseppina Micoli; Maria Gabriella Cusella De Angelis; Paolo Magni

BackgroundInducible promoters are widely spread genetic tools for triggering, tuning and optimizing the expression of recombinant genes in engineered biological systems. Most of them are controlled by the addition of a specific exogenous chemical inducer that indirectly regulates the promoter transcription rate in a concentration-dependent fashion. In order to have a robust and predictable degree of control on promoter activity, the degradation rate of such chemicals should be considered in many applications like recombinant protein production.ResultsIn this work, we use whole-cell biosensors to assess the half-life of three commonly used chemical inducers for recombinant Escherichia coli: Isopropyl β-D-1-thiogalactopyranoside (IPTG), anhydrotetracycline (ATc) and N-(3-oxohexanoyl)-L-homoserine lactone (HSL). A factorial study was conducted to investigate the conditions that significantly contribute to the decay rate of these inducers. Temperature has been found to be the major factor affecting ATc, while medium and pH have been found to highly affect HSL. Finally, no significant degradation was observed for IPTG among the tested conditions.ConclusionsWe have quantified the decay rate of IPTG, ATc and HSL in many conditions, some of which were not previously tested in the literature, and the main effects affecting their degradation were identified via a statistics-based framework. Whole-cell biosensors were successfully used to conduct this study, yielding reproducible measurements via simple multiwell-compatible assays. The knowledge of inducer degradation rate in several contexts has to be considered in the rational design of synthetic biological systems for improving the predictability of induction effects, especially for prolonged experiments.


PLOS ONE | 2015

Multi-Faceted Characterization of a Novel LuxR-Repressible Promoter Library for Escherichia coli.

Susanna Zucca; Lorenzo Pasotti; Nicolò Politi; Michela Casanova; Giuliano Mazzini; Maria Gabriella Cusella De Angelis; Paolo Magni

The genetic elements regulating the natural quorum sensing (QS) networks of several microorganisms are widely used in synthetic biology to control the behaviour of single cells and engineered bacterial populations via ad-hoc constructed synthetic circuits. A number of novel engineering-inspired biological functions have been implemented and model systems have also been constructed to improve the knowledge on natural QS systems. Synthetic QS-based parts, such as promoters, have been reported in literature, to provide biological components with functions that are not present in nature, like modified induction logic or activation/repression by additional molecules. In this work, a library of promoters that can be repressed by the LuxR protein in presence of the QS autoinducer N-3-oxohexanoyl-L-homoserine lactone (AHL) was reported for Escherichia coli, to expand the toolkit of genetic parts that can be used to engineer novel synthetic QS-based systems. The library was constructed via polymerase chain reaction with highly constrained degenerate oligonucleotides, designed according to the consensus -35 and -10 sequences of a previously reported constitutive promoter library of graded strength, to maximize the probability of obtaining functional clones. All the promoters have a lux box between the -35 and -10 regions, to implement a LuxR-repressible behaviour. Twelve unique library members of graded strength (about 100-fold activity range) were selected to form the final library and they were characterized in several genetic contexts, such as in different plasmids, via different reporter genes, in presence of a LuxR expression cassette in different positions and in response to different AHL concentrations. The new obtained regulatory parts and corresponding data can be exploited by synthetic biologists to implement an artificial AHL-dependent repression of transcription in genetic circuits. The target transcriptional activity can be selected among the available library members to meet the design specifications of the biological system.


Systems and Synthetic Biology | 2015

Quantification of the gene silencing performances of rationally-designed synthetic small RNAs

Ilaria Massaiu; Lorenzo Pasotti; Michela Casanova; Nicolò Politi; Susanna Zucca; Maria Gabriella Cusella De Angelis; Paolo Magni

Small RNAs (sRNAs) are genetic tools for the efficient and specific tuning of target genes expression in bacteria. Inspired by naturally occurring sRNAs, recent works proposed the use of artificial sRNAs in synthetic biology for predictable repression of the desired genes. Their potential was demonstrated in several application fields, such as metabolic engineering and bacterial physiology studies. Guidelines for the rational design of novel sRNAs have been recently proposed. According to these guidelines, in this work synthetic sRNAs were designed, constructed and quantitatively characterized in Escherichia coli. An sRNA targeting the reporter gene RFP was tested by measuring the specific gene silencing when RFP was expressed at different transcription levels, under the control of different promoters, in different strains, and in single-gene or operon architecture. The sRNA level was tuned by using plasmids maintained at different copy numbers. Results demonstrated that RFP silencing worked as expected in an sRNA and mRNA expression-dependent fashion. A mathematical model was used to support sRNA characterization and to estimate an efficiency-related parameter that can be used to compare the performance of the designed sRNA. Gene silencing was also successful when RFP was placed in a two-gene synthetic operon, while the non-target gene (GFP) in the operon was not considerably affected. Finally, silencing was evaluated for another designed sRNA targeting the endogenous lactate dehydrogenase gene. The quantitative study performed in this work elucidated interesting performance-related and context-dependent features of synthetic sRNAs that will strongly support predictable gene silencing in disparate basic or applied research studies.


Biological Procedures Online | 2016

A BioBrick™-Compatible Vector for Allelic Replacement Using the XylE Gene as Selection Marker

Michela Casanova; Lorenzo Pasotti; Susanna Zucca; Nicolò Politi; Ilaria Massaiu; Cinzia Calvio; Maria Gabriella Cusella De Angelis; Paolo Magni

BackgroundCircular plasmid-mediated homologous recombination is commonly used for marker-less allelic replacement, exploiting the endogenous recombination machinery of the host. Common limitations of existing methods include high false positive rates due to mutations in counter-selection genes, and limited applicability to specific strains or growth media. Finally, solutions compatible with physical standards, such as the BioBrick™, are not currently available, although they proved to be successful in the design of other replicative or integrative plasmids.FindingsWe illustrate pBBknock, a novel BioBrick™-compatible vector for allelic replacement in Escherichia coli. It includes a temperature-sensitive replication origin and enables marker-less genome engineering via two homologous recombination events. Chloramphenicol resistance allows positive selection of clones after the first event, whereas a colorimetric assay based on the xylE gene provides a simple way to screen clones in which the second recombination event occurs. Here we successfully use pBBknock to delete the lactate dehydrogenase gene in E. coli W, a popular host used in metabolic engineering.ConclusionsCompared with other plasmid-based solutions, pBBknock has a broader application range, not being limited to specific strains or media. We expect that pBBknock will represent a versatile solution both for practitioners, also among the iGEM competition teams, and for research laboratories that use BioBrick™-based assembly procedures.


international conference of the ieee engineering in medicine and biology society | 2015

Methods for genetic optimization of biocatalysts for biofuel production from dairy waste through synthetic biology

Lorenzo Pasotti; Susanna Zucca; Michela Casanova; Nicolò Politi; Ilaria Massaiu; Giuliano Mazzini; Giuseppina Micoli; Cinzia Calvio; Maria Gabriella Cusella De Angelis; Paolo Magni

Whey is an abundant by-product of cheese production process and it is considered a special waste due to its high nutritional load and hypertrophic potential. Technologies for whey valorization are available. They can convert such waste into high-value products, like whey proteins. However, the remaining liquid (called permeate) is still considered as a polluting waste due to its high lactose concentration. The alcoholic fermentation of lactose into ethanol will simultaneously achieve two important goals: safe disposal of a pollutant waste and green energy production. This methodology paper illustrates the workflow carried out to design and realize an optimized microorganism that can efficiently perform the lactose-to-ethanol conversion, engineered via synthetic biology experimental and computational approaches.


Journal of Biological Engineering | 2017

Re-using biological devices: a model-aided analysis of interconnected transcriptional cascades designed from the bottom-up

Lorenzo Pasotti; M. Bellato; Michela Casanova; Susanna Zucca; Maria Gabriella Cusella De Angelis; Paolo Magni

BackgroundThe study of simplified, ad-hoc constructed model systems can help to elucidate if quantitatively characterized biological parts can be effectively re-used in composite circuits to yield predictable functions. Synthetic systems designed from the bottom-up can enable the building of complex interconnected devices via rational approach, supported by mathematical modelling. However, such process is affected by different, usually non-modelled, unpredictability sources, like cell burden.MethodsHere, we analyzed a set of synthetic transcriptional cascades in Escherichia coli. We aimed to test the predictive power of a simple Hill function activation/repression model (no-burden model, NBM) and of a recently proposed model, including Hill functions and the modulation of proteins expression by cell load (burden model, BM). To test the bottom-up approach, the circuit collection was divided into training and test sets, used to learn individual component functions and test the predicted output of interconnected circuits, respectively.ResultsAmong the constructed configurations, two test set circuits showed unexpected logic behaviour. Both NBM and BM were able to predict the quantitative output of interconnected devices with expected behaviour, but only the BM was also able to predict the output of one circuit with unexpected behaviour. Moreover, considering training and test set data together, the BM captures circuits output with higher accuracy than the NBM, which is unable to capture the experimental output exhibited by some of the circuits even qualitatively. Finally, resource usage parameters, estimated via BM, guided the successful construction of new corrected variants of the two circuits showing unexpected behaviour.ConclusionsSuperior descriptive and predictive capabilities were achieved considering resource limitation modelling, but further efforts are needed to improve the accuracy of models for biological engineering.


BMC Biotechnology | 2017

Fermentation of lactose to ethanol in cheese whey permeate and concentrated permeate by engineered Escherichia coli

Lorenzo Pasotti; Susanna Zucca; Michela Casanova; Giuseppina Micoli; Maria Gabriella Cusella De Angelis; Paolo Magni


Synthetic Biology: Engineering, Evolution & Design (SEED2018) | 2018

Overcome Metabolic Burden in Rational Design of Genetic Synthetic Circuits: Deep Characterization of a Crispri Alternative

M. Bellato; Lorenzo Pasotti; E. Salibi; Michela Casanova; M. G. Cusella De Angelis; Paolo Magni


7th annual SBC symposium | 2018

Re-using Biological Devices: Characterization and Mathematical Modeling of Protein- and CRISPRi-mediated Regulation Devices to Design Predictable Interconnected Circuits with Reduced Cell Load

M. Bellato; Lorenzo Pasotti; E. Salibi; Michela Casanova; Ilaria Massaiu; M. G. Cusella De Angelis; Paolo Magni


The Seventh International Meeting on Synthetic Biology (SB7.0) | 2017

Rational engineering of protein- and CRISPRi- mediated regulation devices to design predictable interconnected circuits with reduced cell load

M. Bellato; Lorenzo Pasotti; Michela Casanova; Ilaria Massaiu; Maria Gabriella Cusella De Angelis; Paolo Magni

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