Cell-free systems are promising platforms for rapid and high-throughput prototyping of biological parts in metabolic engineering and synthetic biology. One main limitation of cell- free systems applications is the low… Click to show full abstract
Cell-free systems are promising platforms for rapid and high-throughput prototyping of biological parts in metabolic engineering and synthetic biology. One main limitation of cell- free systems applications is the low fold repression of transcriptional repressors. Hence, prokaryotic biosensor development, which is mostly relying on repressors is limited. In this study, we demonstrate how to improve these biosensors in cell-free systems by applying a transcription factor (TF)-doped extract, a preincubation strategy with the TF plasmid, or reinitiation of the cell-free reaction or two-step cell-free reaction. We use the optimized biosensor to sense the enzymatic production of a rare sugar, D-psicose. This work provides a methodology to optimize repressor based systems in cell-free to further increase the potential of cell-free systems for bioproduction.
               
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