Light-driven synchronization of optogenetic clocks

Elife. 2024 Oct 15:13:RP97754. doi: 10.7554/eLife.97754.

Abstract

Synthetic genetic oscillators can serve as internal clocks within engineered cells to program periodic expression. However, cell-to-cell variability introduces a dispersion in the characteristics of these clocks that drives the population to complete desynchronization. Here, we introduce the optorepressilator, an optically controllable genetic clock that combines the repressilator, a three-node synthetic network in E. coli, with an optogenetic module enabling to reset, delay, or advance its phase using optical inputs. We demonstrate that a population of optorepressilators can be synchronized by transient green light exposure or entrained to oscillate indefinitely by a train of short pulses, through a mechanism reminiscent of natural circadian clocks. Furthermore, we investigate the system's response to detuned external stimuli observing multiple regimes of global synchronization. Integrating experiments and mathematical modeling, we show that the entrainment mechanism is robust and can be understood quantitatively from single cell to population level.

Keywords: E. coli; computational biology; nonlinear dynamics; optogenetics; physics of living systems; synthetic biology; systems biology.

MeSH terms

  • Biological Clocks / genetics
  • Biological Clocks / physiology
  • Circadian Clocks / genetics
  • Escherichia coli* / genetics
  • Escherichia coli* / physiology
  • Light*
  • Models, Theoretical
  • Optogenetics* / methods