Team:Caltech/Project/Phage Pathogen Defense

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The engineered probiotic acts as a delivery vehicle for phage into the large intestine.  There are four important design goals for such as system: (1) the system releases phage into the large intestine, (2) the production of phage is regulated with a high dynamic range between a distinct on and off state, (3) the system can target a wide range of pathogenic bacteria, and (4) the system integrates well within the existing iGEM probiotic.  
The engineered probiotic acts as a delivery vehicle for phage into the large intestine.  There are four important design goals for such as system: (1) the system releases phage into the large intestine, (2) the production of phage is regulated with a high dynamic range between a distinct on and off state, (3) the system can target a wide range of pathogenic bacteria, and (4) the system integrates well within the existing iGEM probiotic.  

Revision as of 06:45, 23 October 2008

{{Caltech_iGEM_08| Content=

Phage Pathogen Defense


Introduction

Pathogenic E. coli.

There are <math> 10^{14} </math> bacterial cells that naturally reside in the human gut, an order of magnitude greater than all the cells in the body. Humans enjoy a mutualistic relationship with intestinal microbiota, wherein the microorganisms perform a host of useful functions, such as processing unused energy substrates, training the immune system, and inhibiting growth of harmful bacterial species [1]. However, not all bacteria populations within the human intestine are benign. There are many pathogenic bacteria which cause a wide variety of diseases when present in the human gut. As one example, cholera is one of the most widespread and damaging of such infectious microorganisms, with the World Health Organization reporting 132,000 cases in 2006 [2]. But cholera is just one of many examples. In the United States alone, there were more than 325,000 hospitalizations from food-borne illnesses in the year of 2006 [3]

There are many medical treatments for food-borne illnesses, the most commonly prescribed being antibiotics. Unfortunately, antibiotics are indiscriminant and lead to rapid depletion of benign bacterial populations within the intestine. Due to this fact, dietary supplements have been popularized which aim to introduce beneficial bacteria back into the gut after antibiotic treatment; these substances have been termed ‘probiotics’. Natural probiotics have two main advantages: they provide useful functions for the host and they competitively inhibit growth of pathogenic bacteria. Natural probiotics do not convey any more advantages than bacteria in a healthy human intestine. Modern synthetic biology techniques should allow us to create an engineered probiotic that goes beyond the limitations of natural probiotics. The viability of such engineered probiotics within humans has already been established [4]. As part of a collaborative effort by the Caltech iGEM team to create a novel probiotic with improved medical applications, this project focuses on engineering a pathogen defense system within E. coli..

System Design

The engineered probiotic acts as a delivery vehicle for phage into the large intestine. There are four important design goals for such as system: (1) the system releases phage into the large intestine, (2) the production of phage is regulated with a high dynamic range between a distinct on and off state, (3) the system can target a wide range of pathogenic bacteria, and (4) the system integrates well within the existing iGEM probiotic.

An obvious delivery mechanism would be the adaptation of natural lysogens, a phase of the phage life cycle in which the phage integrates its DNA with the host organism. Lysogens lie dormant until disturbed by some external stimuli, but can be stimulated to enter the lytic cycle and release phage. There is one major limitation to this method: phage released will be specific to the lysogenic hosts, E. coli. We can avoid this limitation by incorporating as a lysogen a phage which is not normally infectious to E. coli. This phage could potentially target pathogenic bacteria besides E. coli. To demonstrate the feasibility of this approach, a simple model system was developed using λ phage and JW3996-1, a strain of E. coli immune to λ infection due to lamB deletion[5]. In this model, the host is immune to infection unless lamB is expressed on a plasmid. After infection and selection for lysogens, the lamB plasmid is counterselected against to regain immunity. Extending this model to a more realistic situation, we envision using a phage which targets a pathogenic bacterial species, constitutively expressing the phage receptor within E. coli to create lysogens, and inducing the lysogens to infect non-E. coli pathogenic bacteria.


The second plasmid which must be designed controls the induction of the lysogens to release phage into the environment. Control of this aspect of the system is vital for integration with the overall iGEM project. The induction of λ phage lysogens has been explored since 1950 [6], and serves as a model system for the study of other temperate phages. The most famous induction mechanism is ultraviolet radiation (UV). In UV induction of λ lysogens, UV induced DNA damage activates the cellular SOS mechanism, which activates the expression of RecA, a protein involved in SOS response. RecA, in turn, cleaves the λ repressor and leads to phage activation. In this study, activation of the recA pathway was not readily feasible, so an alternative effector was used to elicit induction. A secondary plasmid expressing the E. coli regulatory gene, rcsA, is used as the trigger for λ phage induction. rcsA is one of several regulatory genes which provide a recA independent pathway for λ induction[7]. Overexpression of rcsA leads to λ induction, and, furthermore, rcsA appears to directly compete with the λ suppression gene cI. [6] In this project, rcsA is used to trigger phage production. The effectiveness and dynamic range of rcsA induction is explored.

Constructs

Figure 1 - Constructs involved in expression of the lamB receptor and the TetA cassette

All constructs were made with standard assembly methods. "lamB" and "rcsA" were cloned out of DH10B genomic DNA. Two families of plasmids were created for this project. The first consists of plasmids which express the lamB receptor and the tetracycline resistance cassette. The level of lamB expression required for λ phage infection as unknown, thus, strength of the promoter/RBS combination upstream of lamB was varied between the four constructs of this family.

Figure 2 - Constructs for characterization of rcsA induction


The second family consists of constructs used to characterize rcsA induction of λ phage. rcsA was placed downstream of an acyl-homoserine lactone (AHL) inducible promoter, LuxR. This promoter was extensively characterized by Doug for the oxidative burst project. Using flow cytometry data, the peak response for this promoter was determined to be 10 nM AHL. Constructs with 3 different RBSes in front of rcsA were created to characterize the response of induction. Furthermore, a promoterless rcsA construct was created as a negative control, and a construct with constitutively active λ repressor cI driven by J23106 was also assembled.

Results

Conclusion

References