Toward tunable RNA thermo-switches for temperature dependent gene expression
Oscar M.J.A. Stassen, Ruud J.J.Jorna, Bastiaan A. van den Berg, Rad, Haghi, Farzad Ehtemam, Steven M. Flipse, Marco J.L. de Groot, Janine A., Kiers, I. Emrah Nikerel, Domenico Bellomo

TL;DR
This paper introduces an algorithmic method and software tool for designing tunable RNA thermometers that can precisely control gene expression at specific temperatures, validated experimentally with significant luminescence changes.
Contribution
The authors developed a formalized algorithm and user-friendly software for designing customizable RNA thermometers with adjustable switching temperatures.
Findings
Designed RNA thermometer for 32°C with experimental validation.
Observed 9.2-fold luminescence increase between 30°C and 37°C.
Achieved minimal luminescence change below 30°C.
Abstract
RNA thermometers are mRNA strands with a temperature dependent secondary structure: depending on the spatial conformation, the mRNA strand can get translated (on-state) or can be inaccessible for ribosomes binding (off-state). These have been found in a number of microorganisms (mainly pathogens), where they are used to adaptively regulate the gene expression, in response to changes in the environmental temperature. Besides naturally occurring RNA thermometers, synthetic RNA thermometers have been recently designed by modifying their natural counterparts (Hofacker et al., 2003). The newly designed RNA thermometers are simpler, and exhibit a sharper switching between off- and on-states. However, the proposed trial-and-error design procedure has not been algorithmically formalized, and the switching temperature is rigidly determined by the natural RNA thermometer used as template for the…
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Taxonomy
TopicsRNA and protein synthesis mechanisms · RNA Research and Splicing · CRISPR and Genetic Engineering
