Our Team

FfAME Our Team Emilio Rodríguez Robles

Scientist

Emilio Rodríguez Robles

Emilio Rodríguez Robles is a Postdoctoral Researcher at the Foundation for Applied Molecular Evolution, and his research is focused on synthetic biology, directed evolution, and metabolic engineering of Escherichia coli for xenobiological applications.
  • (386) 418-8085

Research Summary

My research at FfAME focuses on engineering the stable propagation of AEGIS-containing six-letter DNA within living bacterial cells. To accomplish this, I couple the incorporation of AEGIS nucleotides to essential metabolic processes in genetically engineered E. coli strains, thereby enabling growth-coupled selection of cells that adapt to and maintain an expanded genetic system.

Research Focus:
  • Synthetic Biology
  • Xenobiology
  • Astrobiology
  • Directed Evolution
  • Protein Engineering
Education:
  • BS in Biotechnology, Universidad Politécnica de Madrid, Spain (2017)
  • MS in Microbiology, Universidad Autónoma de Madrid, Spain (2018)
  • PhD in Synthetic Biology, ETH Zürich, Switzerland (2024)

Publications

Emilio Rodríguez-Robles, David Müller, Tilmann Künzl, Suren J Nemat, Martin Peter Edelmann, Puneet Srivastava, Dominique Louis, Elisabetta Groaz, Konrad Tiefenbacher, Tania Michelle Roberts, Piet Herdewijn, Philippe Marlière, Sven Panke Metabolic Engineering 85, ed. Sang Yup Lee, Jay Keasling, Elsevier 26-34 (2024)

Integration of novel compounds into biological processes holds significant potential for modifying or expanding existing cellular functions. However, the cellular uptake of these compounds is often hindered by selectively permeable membranes. We present a novel bacterial transport system that has been rationally designed to address this challenge. Our approach utilizes a highly promiscuous sulfonate membrane transporter, which allows the passage of cargo molecules attached as amides to a sulfobutanoate transport vector molecule into the cytoplasm of the cell. These cargoes can then be unloaded from the sulfobutanoyl amides using an engineered variant of the enzyme γ-glutamyl transferase, which hydrolyzes the amide bond and releases the cargo molecule within the cell. Here, we provide evidence for the broad substrate specificity of both components of the system by evaluating a panel of structurally diverse sulfobutanoyl amides. Furthermore, we successfully implement the synthetic uptake system in vivo and showcase its functionality by importing an impermeant non-canonical amino acid.

Martin P Edelmann, Sietse Couperus, Emilio Rodríguez-Robles, Julie Rivollier, Tania M Roberts, Sven Panke, Philippe Marlière Nucl. Acids Res. 52 (20) 12650-12668 (2024)

All known bacterial tRNAs adopt the canonical cloverleaf 2D and L-shaped 3D structures. We aimed to explore whether alternative tRNA structures could be introduced in bacterial translation. To this end, we crafted a vitamin-based genetic system to evolve Escherichia coli toward activity of structurally non-canonical tRNAs. The system reliably couples (escape frequency <10−12) growth with the activities of a novel orthogonal histidine suppressor tRNA (HisTUAC) and of the cognate ARS (HisS) via suppression of a GTA valine codon in the mRNA of an enzyme in thiamine biosynthesis (ThiN). Suppression results in the introduction of an essential histidine and thereby confers thiamine prototrophy. We then replaced HisTUAC in the system with non-canonical suppressor tRNAs and selected for growth. A strain evolved to utilize mini HisT, a tRNA lacking the D-arm, and we identified the responsible mutation in an RNase gene (pnp) involved in tRNA degradation. This indicated that HisS, the ribosome, and EF-Tu accept mini HisT ab initio, which we confirmed genetically and through in vitro translation experiments. Our results reveal a previously unknown flexibility of the bacterial translation machinery for the accepted fold of the adaptor of the genetic code and demonstrate the power of the vitamin-based suppression system.

David Mueller, Remo Baettig, Tilmann Kuenzl, Emilio Rodríguez-Robles, Tania Michelle Roberts, Philippe Marlière, Sven Panke ACS Synthetic Biology 13 (9), American Chemical Society 2969-2981 (2024)

Xenobiology is an emerging field that focuses on the extension and redesign of biological systems through the use of laboratory-derived xenomolecules, which are molecules that are new to the metabolism of the cell. Despite the enormous potential of using xenomolecules in living organisms, most noncanonical building blocks still need to be supplied externally, and often poor uptake into cells limits wider applicability. To improve the cytosolic availability of noncanonical molecules, a synthetic transport system based on portage transport was developed, in which molecules of interest “cargo” are linked to a synthetic transport vector that enables piggyback transport through the alkylsulfonate transporter (SsuABC) of Escherichia coli. Upon cytosolic delivery, the vector-cargo conjugate is enzymatically cleaved by GGTxe, leading to the release of the cargo molecule. To deepen our understanding of the synthetic transport system, we focused on the characterization and further development of the enzymatic cargo release step. Hence, the substrate scope of GGTxe was characterized using a library of structurally diverse vector-cargo conjugates and MS/MS-based quantification of hydrolysis products in a kinetic manner. The resulting substrate tolerance characterization revealed that vector-amino acid conjugates were significantly unfavored. To overcome this shortcoming, a selection system based on metabolic auxotrophy complementation and directed evolution of GGTxe was established. In a directed evolution campaign, we improved the enzymatic activity of GGTxe for vector-amino acid conjugates and revealed the importance of residue D386 in the cargo unloading step.

Emilio Rodriguez-Robles, JM Martínez, Tânia Leandro, Ricardo Amils Microbiol. Resource Announ. 8 (32), ASM (2019)

The draft genome of Brevundimonas sp. strain T2.26MG-97, isolated at a depth of 492.6 m in the subsurface of the Iberian Pyrite Belt, is reported here. It consists of 262 scaffolds with a total genome length of 3.68 Mbp, where 3,549 coding DNA sequences have been annotated.