Scientists led by the pioneering Harvard synthetic biologist Pamela Silver, PhD, have harnessed the circadian mechanism found in cyanobacteria to transplant the circadian wiring into a common species of bacteria that is naturally non–circadian. The novel work, which for the first time demonstrates the transplant of a circadian rhythm, is reported in a new study in Science Advances.

“By looking at systems in nature as modular, we think like engineers to manipulate and use biological circuits in a predictable, programmable way,” says Silver, who is a core faculty member at the Wyss Institute for Biologically Inspired Engineering at Harvard University and a professor in the Department of Systems Biology at Harvard Medical School, in a release.

Silver’s team used this methodology to successfully transplant a circadian rhythm into the bacterial species E. coli, which is widely used as a “workhorse” cell species by biologists due to how well it is understood and the ease in which E. coli can be genetically altered. The genetically engineered circadian E. coli designed by Silver could one day be used in probiotic pills as a way to monitor the gut microbiota.

To create a circadian rhythm in E. coli, the protein circuit responsible for regulating circadian oscillations was modularly removed from cyanobacteria, a photosynthetic bacteria species that is the only bacteria known to naturally contain a circadian rhythm. The protein circuit was then transplanted into E. coli, where it can be connected to additional gene expression components to potentially influence metabolic and behavioral functions in programmable relation to the day–night cycle. In the experimental E. coli, the circuit was linked to fluorescent proteins that lit up each time the circadian oscillations were triggered, causing the E. coli to glow rhythmically in a stunning visual confirmation of the transplant’s success.

“The ultimate dream application would be to deliver these circadian E. coli to an individual in pill form, which could allow the circadian rhythm to be linked to additional biological circuits in order to perform a precisely–timed release of drugs, or to be able to sense and influence the host’s circadian rhythm,” says the study’s first author, Anna Chen, a systems biology graduate student at the Wyss Institute and Harvard Medical School.

The human circadian rhythm has been shown to impact metabolism, which when disturbed can contribute to obesity and glucose intolerance. What’s more, many drugs including those commonly used to treat various cancers have been shown to fluctuate in their efficacy based on the time of day and the point in a patient’s circadian cycle in which they are administered. Using circadian E. coli, therapeutic strategies to influence a patient’s circadian rhythm or to program drugs to release internally at a specific point in the patient’s circadian rhythm could therefore energize treatments for cancer and metabolic diseases, among other clinical applications.



And further down the road, even the condition known as “jet lag”, which is caused when high–speed air travel disrupts a person’s body clock, might someday be combated using circadian E. coli that could potentially be leveraged to re–program and adjust the body’s circadian rhythm to match the travel destination’s day–night cycle.

“What’s really amazing is that we’ve demonstrated the modularity of biological systems—this finding goes beyond the transplantability of a circadian rhythm to open new doors to understanding how other modular biological circuits could be transplanted from one species to another,” Silver says.

“Circadian rhythm has an enormous impact on our health and how we respond to our environment—so the opportunity to tap into those controls, using genome engineering to rewire genetic circuits, opens an exciting new path for treating disease and regulating a wide range of physiological behaviors,” says Wyss Institute founding director Donald Ingber, MD, PhD, who is also the Judah Folkman Professor of Vascular Biology at Harvard Medical School and Boston Children’s Hospital and Professor of Bioengineering at the Harvard John A. Paulson School of Engineering and Applied Sciences.