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Bacterial Transcription01:53

Bacterial Transcription

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RNA polymerase (RNAP) carries out DNA-dependent RNA synthesis in both bacteria and eukaryotes. Bacteria do not have a membrane-bound nucleus. So, transcription and translation occur simultaneously, on the same DNA template.
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Master transcription regulators are regulatory proteins that are predominantly responsible for regulating the expression of multiple genes. Often these genes work in concert to drive a  complex process. Activation of a master transcription regulator can lead to a cascade of transcriptional activation necessary for that outcome. These regulators can directly bind to the regulatory sequences of the various genes involved, or they can indirectly regulate transcription by binding to regulatory...
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Overview
Transcription is the process of synthesizing RNA from a DNA sequence by RNA polymerase. It is the first step in producing a protein from a gene sequence. Additionally, many other proteins and regulatory sequences are involved in the proper synthesis of messenger RNA (mRNA). Regulation of transcription is responsible for the differentiation of all the different types of cells and often for the proper cellular response to environmental signals.
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Initiation is the first step of transcription in eukaryotes. Prokaryotic RNA Polymerase (RNAP) can bind to the template DNA and start transcribing. On the other hand, transcription in eukaryotes requires additional proteins, called transcription factors, to first bind to the promoter region in the DNA template. This binding helps recruit the specific RNAP that can assemble on the DNA and start transcription.
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Quantum-inspired logic for advanced Transcriptional Programming.

Prasaad T Milner1, Dowan Kim1, Corey J Wilson1

  • 1Georgia Institute of Technology, School of Chemical & Biomolecular Engineering, 311 Ferst Drive, Atlanta, GA 30332-0100, United States.

Nucleic Acids Research
|May 21, 2025
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Summary
This summary is machine-generated.

This study introduces compressed genetic circuits for enhanced biological decision-making. These novel synthetic biology tools enable complex logic operations with fewer inputs, expanding biocomputing capabilities.

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Area of Science:

  • Synthetic Biology
  • Biocomputing
  • Genetic Engineering

Background:

  • Intelligent biological systems rely on scalable decision-making, inheritable memory, and communication.
  • Current genetic circuits often require numerous inputs for complex logic operations, increasing metabolic burden.
  • There is a need for more efficient genetic circuit designs that minimize metabolic load while increasing computational complexity.

Purpose of the Study:

  • To develop a novel platform technology for constructing genetic circuits with multi-output gene control using fewer inputs.
  • To engineer synthetic bidirectional promoters and transcription factors for complex logical operations inspired by quantum computing.
  • To expand the biocomputing capacity of Transcriptional Programming through compressed and scalable multi-input/output logical operations.

Main Methods:

  • Engineered synthetic bidirectional promoters regulated by synthetic transcription factors.
  • Constructed 1-input, 2-output biological logic gates (QUBIT and PAULI-X) as compressed genetic circuits.
  • Layered gates to create complex quantum-inspired logical operations (FEYNMAN, TOFFOLI) and a 2-input, 4-output operation.
  • Developed a recombinase-based memory operation for in situ truth table remapping between logic gates.

Main Results:

  • Successfully engineered compressed genetic circuits capable of 1-input, 2-output logical operations (biological QUBIT and PAULI-X gates).
  • Demonstrated the layering of these gates to achieve more complex quantum-inspired logical operations.
  • Showcased a 2-input, 4-output operation utilizing the full input permutation space.
  • Developed a functional recombinase-based memory system to dynamically alter logic gate behavior.

Conclusions:

  • Introduced a versatile synthetic biology toolkit for advanced biocomputing.
  • The developed compressed genetic circuits significantly expand the logic capabilities of Transcriptional Programming.
  • This technology offers a pathway to more complex and metabolically efficient biological decision-making systems.