UCLA Chemical Engineers
Design Circuit for Artificial Cell-to-Cell Communication
Date: February 9, 2004
Contact: Chris Sutton ( chris@ea.ucla.edu
)
Phone: 310-206-0540
Engineers at the University of California, Los
Angeles have discovered a way to alter cell metabolism that allows
cells to artificially communicate with each other, according to
a study published this week in the journal Proceedings of the
National Academy of Sciences. If cells can communicate in this
fashion, say researchers, coordinated cellular action is possible.
Cells acting in unison could, for example, be directed to create
greater quantities of a chemical compound that would later be
used in the manufacture of chemicals or pharmaceuticals.

Professor James C. Liao |
“Concerted biological behavior is certainly
more easily achievable if cells can communicate,” said James
Liao, co-author of the study and professor of chemical engineering
at the UCLA Henry Samueli School of Engineering and Applied Science.
“It’s an important step toward a more biologically
based means of producing chemical compounds with desired properties.”
The study describes the construction of a gene-metabolic
circuit that mimics a natural mechanism cells use to “talk”
to each other. In the UCLA experiments, cells of the bacteria
Escherichia coli sent out signals by secreting acetate, and reacted
in concert once the acetate reached a certain threshold concentration.
Liao’s research is part of a field known
as metabolic engineering, which involves altering cell metabolism,
including the biochemical reactions and all the control circuits
associated with it, so the cell can perform non-native functions
such as producing a specific chemical, behaving as a sensor or
even acting as a diagnostic tool.
Artificial gene circuits that resemble the natural
circuitry in the cell have already been designed by researchers,
and have led to bacterial strains that exhibit programmed behavior.
But these artificially created networks are isolated from cellular
metabolism and are designed to function without intercellular
communication. According to Liao’s study, much more complex
designer biosystems can be possible if cells are engineered to
communicate with each other.
“Synchronized cellular behavior could lead
to the manufacture of chemicals using renewable resources and
environmentally friendly processes,” said Liao. “Most
of our chemicals today come from petroleum. In the next few decades
the goal is to replace petroleum-based chemicals with biologically
based chemicals.”
Cargill-Dow, Dupont and other large chemical companies
are already developing and producing key chemicals using metabolic
engineering, says Liao.
Liao has created an artificial mechanism so that
the cells used for his study will secrete low levels of acetate
all the time, turning each cell into an artificial sensor by alerting
nearby cells of its presence.
“We are mimicking the natural mechanism
that cells use to talk to each other in nature,” said Liao.
“For example, an individual pathogen secretes a chemical,
much like an animal secretes pheromones, and when a pathogen senses
a certain level of chemicals from similar pathogens, it reacts
by attacking the host. Like individual soldiers who wait for reinforcements
to arrive, so too do pathogens.
Altering cell metabolism is a biologically-based
approach that can be used to create chemical compounds that are
later used in the manufacture of plastics or pharmaceuticals.
For instance, lactic acid and other monomers for plastics could
be produced more naturally through metabolic engineering. Constructing
chemical compounds through the use of bacterial cells instead
of molecules from non-renewable fossil fuels like petroleum is
more environmentally friendly and cost effective.
UCLA has been involved in metabolic engineering
for many years. In 2000 Liao published a paper that described
the creation of a control circuit to direct the metabolic flow
in the cell. The study published this week evolved from that earlier
work.
“The earlier approach does not allow cells
to communicate with each other,” said Liao. “In order
for the cell to produce the desired chemicals in an effective
way, cells must coordinate with each other to produce simultaneously
a large quantity of a compound.”
The UCLA research could also lead to other applications.
“Cell-to-cell communication makes possible
the design of intelligent bio-circuits,” said Liao. “Bio-circuits
will lead to specialized computational functions and in the long-term
it could be used for building intelligent prosthetics and medicines.”
The research is supported by a National Science
Foundation grant and the UCLA Center for Cell Mimetic Space Exploration.
Other contributors to the study are lead author Thomas Bulter,
Sun-Gu Lee, Wilson WaiChun Wong, Eileen Fung and Michael R. Connor.
The full study is available at the National Academy
of Sciences web site, at http://www.pnas.org/.
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