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An Optical Pooled Screening Platform for Single-Molecule Measurements in Live Cells: A Pilot Study
Uppsala University, Disciplinary Domain of Science and Technology, Biology, Department of Cell and Molecular Biology, Molecular Systems Biology.ORCID iD: 0000-0002-7442-9921
Uppsala University, Disciplinary Domain of Science and Technology, Biology, Department of Cell and Molecular Biology, Molecular Systems Biology. Uppsala University, Science for Life Laboratory, SciLifeLab.ORCID iD: 0000-0001-8788-9399
Uppsala University, Science for Life Laboratory, SciLifeLab. Uppsala University, Disciplinary Domain of Science and Technology, Biology, Department of Cell and Molecular Biology, Molecular Systems Biology.ORCID iD: 0000-0001-5175-0176
Uppsala University, Science for Life Laboratory, SciLifeLab. Uppsala University, Disciplinary Domain of Science and Technology, Biology, Department of Cell and Molecular Biology, Molecular Systems Biology.ORCID iD: 0000-0002-7802-8869
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(English)Manuscript (preprint) (Other academic)
Abstract [en]

We seek to build an optical pooled screening platform with single-molecule readouts to quantify transcription factor(TF)-DNA binding kinetics across thousands of TF variants in live cells. As a step toward this goal, this pilot study tackles the frontline challenge of scaling optical pooled screening (OPS) with chromosomal barcodes, previously demonstrated for ~10² chromosomal genotypes in Escherichia coli (E. coli) (Soares et al., 2025), to 10³–10⁴ genotypes. We implemented a dual-barcode in situ genotyping and pooled λ-Red recombineering workflow to enable high-throughput single-molecule phenotyping of LacI–mVenus variants. In a six-genotype pilot library (WT, Q18M, V52A, Q55N, G58A and a negative control lacking a specific genomic Lac operator), in situ genotyping correctly identified 5/6 strains, and live-cell imaging recovered expected phenotypes for identified strains. This pilot establishes OPS as a practical foundation for single-molecule phenotyping with large TF variants library and identifies below design constraints to address before scaling : dual-barcode decoding efficiency, rare inter-donor recombination, and instability of long LacO arrays.

National Category
Molecular Biology
Identifiers
URN: urn:nbn:se:uu:diva-571389OAI: oai:DiVA.org:uu-571389DiVA, id: diva2:2012992
Available from: 2025-11-11 Created: 2025-11-11 Last updated: 2025-12-02
In thesis
1. Bind at First Sight?: Specificity, Stability, Inducibility and Search Kinetics in lac repressor-DNA binding
Open this publication in new window or tab >>Bind at First Sight?: Specificity, Stability, Inducibility and Search Kinetics in lac repressor-DNA binding
2025 (English)Doctoral thesis, comprehensive summary (Other academic)
Abstract [en]

T Transcription factors (TFs) must locate and selectively bind their DNA targets while remaining responsive to cellular signals. In my thesis project, I used the lac repressor (LacI) as a model to investigate the dominant microscopic parameter for sequence specificity and study how conformation switch bias influences TF-DNA interaction phenotypes. I also developed a new methodology for high-throughput mapping of these phenotypes across a vast protein sequence space. In Paper I, a three-state model was derived, which links macroscopic association (ka) and dissociation (kd) rates to microscopic determinants, and predicts an anti-correlation between ka and kd. High-throughput kinetics on protein-binding microarrays (HT-k-PBMs) across 2,479 Lac operator variants confirmed this anti-correlation. We found that the inferred variation in recognition probability (ptot​) exceeded that of the microscopic off-rate (koff,μ) by ~1.7-fold, conclusively demonstrating that sequence specificity is governed primarily by association. In Paper II, we tested a mechanistic hypothesis that ptot​ is set by the conformational switch centered on the LacI hinge region, which was proposed as the mechanism to balance speed and stability of target binding.  We engineered two hinge-helix mutants of LacI—V52A, which increases helical propensity, and Q55N, which decreases it—and quantified their kinetic phenotypes both in vitro using HT-k-PBM and in vivo by measuring repression strength with the Miller assay and target search and binding rates using single-molecule measurements in living bacterial cells. Relative to WT-LacI, the in vitro macroscopic kinetics (ka, kd, Kd) of the engineered mutants shifted in opposite directions. This translated to distinct in-cell performances: V52A strengthened repression but with reduced DNA specificity and loss of inducibility, while Q55N weakened repression but increased specificity and retained inducibility. Notably, neither variant measurably altered the target search speed in cells relative to WT-LacI. Finally, in Paper III, we present an Optical Pooled Screening (OPS) method that combines chromosomal dual barcodes with pooled λ-Red recombineering to scale single-molecule phenotyping to many LacI variants expressed from the chromosome. In the pilot study, 5/6 strains were correctly decoded, and the expected phenotypes were recovered. We also outlined key constraints needing design refinements prior to full-scale implementation.

Place, publisher, year, edition, pages
Uppsala: Acta Universitatis Upsaliensis, 2025. p. 69
Series
Digital Comprehensive Summaries of Uppsala Dissertations from the Faculty of Science and Technology, ISSN 1651-6214 ; 2614
Keywords
Specificity, Stability, Seach speed, Lac repressor, inducibility
National Category
Molecular Biology
Identifiers
urn:nbn:se:uu:diva-571679 (URN)978-91-513-2671-9 (ISBN)
Public defence
2026-01-16, B21, BMC, UPPSALA, 09:15 (English)
Opponent
Supervisors
Available from: 2025-12-18 Created: 2025-11-17 Last updated: 2025-12-18

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Yuan, JinwenKandavalli, VinodhSirman, DvirZikrin, SpartakElf, Johan

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