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Synthetic genetics: beyond DNA and RNA

21 Sep 18

Speaker: Philipp Holliger, PhD. Program Leader MRC Laboratory of Molecular Biology Cambridge Biomedical Campus Cambridge - UK

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Presentation

Organizers: IRB Barcelona

Date: Friday, 21 September, 12:00h

Place: Felix Serratosa hall

Host: Modesto Orozco, PhD Group Leades - IRB Barcelona

 

Abstract

Synthetic biology seeks to probe fundamental aspects of biological form and function by construction (i.e. resynthesis) rather than deconstruction (analysis). Synthesis thus complements reductionist and analytic studies of life, and allows novel approaches towards fundamental biological questions.

We have been exploiting the synthesis paradigm to explore the chemical etiology of the genetic apparatus shared by all life on earth. Specifically, we ask why information storage and propagation in biological systems is based on just two types of nucleic acids, DNA and RNA. Is the chemistry of life’s genetic system based on chance or necessity? Does it reflect a "frozen accident", imposed at the origin of life, or are DNA and RNA functionally superior to simple alternatives.

We have advanced the development and application of strategies to enable the enzymatic synthesis and reverse transcription and hence replication and evolution of synthetic genetic polymers not found in nature, which we term XNAs. We show that eight different synthetic polymers, based on nucleic acid architectures not found in nature, can also mediate genetic information storage and propagation [1]. Beyond heredity, we demonstrate a capacity for Darwinian evolution by the de novo selection of specific ligands (XNA aptamers) and catalysts (XNAzymes) based on entirely synthetic XNA backbones [1, 2]. Thus, key hallmarks of living systems, including heredity and evolution are not limited to DNA and RNA but can be implemented in synthetic polymers and are likely to be emergent properties of polymers capable of information storage.

I’ll describe our progress in the engineering and evolution of RNA polymerase ribozymes towards a general RNA polymerase and self-replication capacity We have discovered RNA polymerase ribozymes that are capable of the templated synthesis (i.e. transcription) of another simple ribozyme [3] or RNA oligomers exceeding their own size (>200 nts) [4]. Finally, I’ll be presenting recent work on the engineering of a RNA triplet polymerase ribozyme, which is able to copy and replicate even highly structured RNA templates and enables non-canonical reverse and primer-free RNA replication modes [5].

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[1] Pinheiro VB, Taylor AI, Cozens C, Abramov M, Renders M, Zhang S, Chaput JC, Wengel J, Peak- Chew S-Y, McLaughlin SH, Herdewijn P & Holliger P (2012) Synthetic Genetic Polymers Capable of Heredity and Evolution. Science. 336: 341-44.

[2] Taylor AI, Pinheiro VB, Smola MJ, Morgunov AS, Peak-Chew SY, Cozens C, Weeks KM, Herdewijn P & Holliger P. (2015) Catalysts from synthetic genetic polymers. Nature, 518: 427-30

[3] Wochner A, Attwater J, Coulson A & Holliger P (2011) Ribozyme-catalyzed transcription of an active ribozyme. Science ; 332 : 209-12.

[4] Attwater J, Wochner A & Holliger P. (2013) In-ice evolution of RNA polymerase ribozyme activity. Nature Chem.; 5 : 1011-8.

[5] Attwater J, Raguram A, Morgunov AS, Gianni E & Holliger P (2018) Ribozyme-catalysed RNA synthesis using triplet building blocks. eLife, 7:e35255

 

Plenary Seminar