Gebel, Jeannette; Ciglieri, Elisa; Stahl, Rainer; Duthie, Fraser; Frechen, Fabian; Möglich, Andreas; Müller-Hartmann, Herbert; Schmidt, Hanns-Martin; Wachten, Dagmar: Potent optogenetic regulation of gene expression in mammalian cells for bioproduction and basic research. In: Nucleic acids research. 2025, vol. 53, iss. 12, gkaf546, 1-17.
Online-Ausgabe in bonndoc: https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11811/13799
Online-Ausgabe in bonndoc: https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11811/13799
@article{handle:20.500.11811/13799,
author = {{Jeannette Gebel} and {Elisa Ciglieri} and {Rainer Stahl} and {Fraser Duthie} and {Fabian Frechen} and {Andreas Möglich} and {Herbert Müller-Hartmann} and {Hanns-Martin Schmidt} and {Dagmar Wachten}},
title = {Potent optogenetic regulation of gene expression in mammalian cells for bioproduction and basic research},
publisher = {Oxford University Press},
year = 2025,
month = jun,
journal = {Nucleic acids research},
volume = 2025, vol. 53,
number = iss. 12, gkaf546,
pages = 1--17,
note = {Precise temporal and spatial control of gene expression greatly benefits the study of specific cellular circuits and activities. Compared to chemical inducers, light-dependent control of gene expression by optogenetics achieves a higher spatial and temporal resolution. Beyond basic research, this could also prove decisive for manufacturing difficult-to-express proteins in pharmaceutical bioproduction. However, current optogenetic gene-expression systems limit this application in mammalian cells, as expression levels and the degree of induction upon light stimulation are insufficient. To overcome this limitation, we designed a photoswitch by fusing the blue light-activated light–oxygen–voltage receptor EL222 from Erythrobacter litoralis to the three transcriptional activator domains VP64, p65, and Rta in tandem. The result ant photoswitch, dubbed DEL-VPR, allows up to a 570-fold induction of target gene expression by blue light, thereby achieving expression levels of strong constitutive promoters. Here, we used DEL-VPR to enable light-induced expression of complex monoclonal and bispecific antibodies with reduced byproduct expression and increased yield of functional protein complexes. Our approach offers temporally controlled yet strong gene expression and applies to academic and industrial settings.},
url = {https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11811/13799}
}
author = {{Jeannette Gebel} and {Elisa Ciglieri} and {Rainer Stahl} and {Fraser Duthie} and {Fabian Frechen} and {Andreas Möglich} and {Herbert Müller-Hartmann} and {Hanns-Martin Schmidt} and {Dagmar Wachten}},
title = {Potent optogenetic regulation of gene expression in mammalian cells for bioproduction and basic research},
publisher = {Oxford University Press},
year = 2025,
month = jun,
journal = {Nucleic acids research},
volume = 2025, vol. 53,
number = iss. 12, gkaf546,
pages = 1--17,
note = {Precise temporal and spatial control of gene expression greatly benefits the study of specific cellular circuits and activities. Compared to chemical inducers, light-dependent control of gene expression by optogenetics achieves a higher spatial and temporal resolution. Beyond basic research, this could also prove decisive for manufacturing difficult-to-express proteins in pharmaceutical bioproduction. However, current optogenetic gene-expression systems limit this application in mammalian cells, as expression levels and the degree of induction upon light stimulation are insufficient. To overcome this limitation, we designed a photoswitch by fusing the blue light-activated light–oxygen–voltage receptor EL222 from Erythrobacter litoralis to the three transcriptional activator domains VP64, p65, and Rta in tandem. The result ant photoswitch, dubbed DEL-VPR, allows up to a 570-fold induction of target gene expression by blue light, thereby achieving expression levels of strong constitutive promoters. Here, we used DEL-VPR to enable light-induced expression of complex monoclonal and bispecific antibodies with reduced byproduct expression and increased yield of functional protein complexes. Our approach offers temporally controlled yet strong gene expression and applies to academic and industrial settings.},
url = {https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11811/13799}
}





