Synthetic and Systems Biotechnology (Jun 2022)

Toehold switch based biosensors for sensing the highly trafficked rosewood Dalbergia maritima

  • Paul Soudier,
  • Daniel Rodriguez Pinzon,
  • Tristan Reif-Trauttmansdorff,
  • Hassan Hijazi,
  • Maëva Cherrière,
  • Cátia Goncalves Pereira,
  • Doriane Blaise,
  • Maxime Pispisa,
  • Angelyne Saint-Julien,
  • William Hamlet,
  • Melissa Nguevo,
  • Eva Gomes,
  • Sophia Belkhelfa,
  • Anna Niarakis,
  • Manish Kushwaha,
  • Ioana Grigoras

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 7, no. 2
pp. 791 – 801

Abstract

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Nucleic acid sensing is a 3 decades old but still challenging area of application for different biological sub-domains, from pathogen detection to single cell transcriptomics analysis. The many applications of nucleic acid detection and identification are mostly carried out by PCR techniques, sequencing, and their derivatives used at large scale. However, these methods’ limitations on speed, cost, complexity and specificity have motivated the development of innovative detection methods among which nucleic acid biosensing technologies seem promising. Toehold switches are a particular class of RNA sensing devices relying on a conformational switch of secondary structure induced by the pairing of the detected trigger RNA with a de novo designed synthetic sensing mRNA molecule. Here we describe a streamlined methodology enabling the development of such a sensor for the RNA-mediated detection of an endangered plant species in a cell-free reaction system. We applied this methodology to help identify the rosewood Dalbergia maritima, a highly trafficked wood, whose protection is limited by the capacity of the authorities to distinguish protected logs from other unprotected but related species. The streamlined pipeline presented in this work is a versatile framework enabling cheap and rapid development of new sensors for custom RNA detection.

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