2016 Synthetic Biology: Engineering, Evolution & Design (SEED)

Design, Synthesis and Testing Towards a 57-Codon Genome

Authors

Matthieu M. Landon - Presenter, Harvard University
Marc Guell, Harvard Medical School
Gleb Kuznetsov, Harvard Medical School
Jun Teramoto, Harvard Medical School
Julie E Norville, Harvard Medical School
Michael G. Napolitano, Harvard University
Daniel B. Goodman, Harvard Medical School
Barry L. Wanner, Harvard Medical School
Marc J. Lajoie, Harvard Medical School
George M. Church, Harvard University

Recoding, the re-purposing of genetic codons, is a powerful strategy for enhancing genomes with functions not commonly found in nature. We report the computational design, synthesis, and progress towards assembly of a 3.97 MB, 57-codon Escherichia coli genome in which all 62,214 instances of seven codons were replaced with synonymous alternatives across all protein coding genes. Thus far, we have validated 63% of recoded genes by individually testing 55 segments of 50-kb each. Importantly, 90% of tested essential genes retained functionality with limited fitness effect. We demonstrate identification and correction of lethal design exceptions, only 13 of which were found in 2229 genes tested. This work underscores the feasibility of rewriting genomes and establishes a framework for large-scale design, assembly, troubleshooting and phenotypic analysis of synthetic organisms.