| Literature DB >> 22164050 |
Imbi Kurvet1, Angela Ivask, Olesja Bondarenko, Mariliis Sihtmäe, Anne Kahru.
Abstract
We show that in vitro toxicity assay based on inhibition of the bioluminescence of recombinant Escherichia coli encoding thermostable luciferase from Photorhabdus luminescens is a versatile alternative to Vibrio fischeri Microtox™ test. Performance of two luxCDABE-transformed E. coli MC1061 constructs (pDNlux) and (pSLlux) otherwise identical, but having 100-fold different background luminescence was compared with the performance of V. fischeri. The microplate luminometer and a kinetic Flash-Assay test format was used that differently from Microtox test is also applicable for high throughput analysis. Toxic effects (30-s till 30-min EC(50)) of four heavy metals (Zn, Cd, Hg, Cu) and three organic chemicals (aniline, 3,5-dichloroaniline and 3,5-dichlorophenol) were studied. Both E. coli strains had comparable sensitivity and the respective 30-min EC(50) values highly correlated (log-log R(2) = 0.99; p < 0.01) showing that the sensitivity of the recombinant bacteria towards chemicals analyzed did not depend on the bioluminescence level of the recombinant cells. The most toxic chemical for all used bacterial strains (E. coli, V. fischeri) was mercury whereas the lowest EC(50) values for Hg (0.04-0.05 mg/L) and highest EC(50) values for aniline (1,300-1,700 mg/L) were observed for E. coli strains. Despite of that, toxicity results obtained with both E. coli strains (pSLlux and pDNlux) significantly correlated with V. fischeri results (log-log R(2) = 0.70/0.75; p < 0.05/0.01). The use of amino acids (0.25%) and glucose (0.05%)-supplemented M9 medium instead of leucine-supplemented saline significantly (p < 0.05) reduced the apparent toxicity of heavy metals to both E. coli strains up to three orders of magnitude, but had little or no complexing effect on organic compounds. Thus, P. luminescens luxCDABE-transformed E. coli strains can be successfully used for the acute toxicity screening of various types of organic chemicals and heavy metals and can replace V. fischeri in certain cases where the thermostability of luciferase >30 °C is crucial. The kinetic Flash Assay test format of the bioluminescence inhibition assay facilitates high throughput analysis. The assay medium, especially in case of testing heavy metals should be a compromise: optimal for the viability/luminescence of the recombinant test strain and of minimum complexing potential.Entities:
Keywords: anilines; bioluminescence; heavy metals; high throughput assay; luxCDABE; toxicity
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2011 PMID: 22164050 PMCID: PMC3231736 DOI: 10.3390/s110807865
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sensors (Basel) ISSN: 1424-8220 Impact factor: 3.576
Recombinant constitutively luminescent Escherichia coli strains used.
| MC1061 (pDNlux) | Tetracycline (10 mg/L) (Boehringer-Mannheim GmbH, Mannheim, Germany) | [ | |
| MC1061 (pSLlux) | Same as above but | Ampicillin (100 mg/L) (Serva, Feinbiochemika, Heidelberg/New York) | [ |
defective for the synthesis of leucine [33];
Tcr, luxCDABE in pDN18N constructed in [34] were electroporated into E. coli MC1061 to obtain constitutively luminescent strain E. coli MC1061(pDNlux);
Apr, luxCDABE in pSL1190 constructed in [34] were electroporated into E. coli MC1061 to obtain constitutively luminescent strains E. coli MC1061(pSLlux).
Figure 1.Effect of the exposure time on the toxicity (EC50, mg/L) of Cu2+ (tested as CuSO4), 3,5-dichloroaniline (3,5-DCA) and aniline towards luminescent recombinant Escherichia coli MC1061(pSLlux) in Leu-saline, 30 °C (orange bars) and Vibrio fischeri in 2% saline, 20 °C (blue bars). (* the EC50 value is different from the 30-s EC50 value for the same chemical and same bacterium, p < 0.05. Note the logarithmic scale of the Y-axis).
Toxicity (30-min EC50, mg/L) of seven standard chemicals to Vibrio fischeri and recombinant Escherichia coli strains MC1061(pDNlux) and (pSLlux) in different test media. The average of three independent experiments ± standard deviation is shown.
| Test medium: | GAA-M9 | Leu-saline | GAA-M9 | Leu-saline | 2% saline |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Test temperature: | 30 °C | 30 °C | 30 °C | 30 °C | 20 °C |
| Zn2+ (ZnSO4·7H2O) | 1,089 ± 147 | 0.60 ± 0.083 | 1,009 ± 114 | 0.69 ± 0.46 | 9.27 ± 0.38 |
| Cd2+ (CdCl2·H2O) | 345 ± 1.47 | 1.94 ± 1.01 | 1,085 ± 441 | 3.49 ± 1.51 | 31 ± 18.2 |
| Hg2+ (HgCl2) | 0.39 ± 0.09 | 0.04 ± 0.002 | 1.9 ± 0.44 | 0.049 ± 0.02 | 0.23 ± 0.13 |
| Cu2+ (CuSO4) | 83.5 ± 10.9 | 1.22 ± 0.94 | 131 ± 20.1 | 3.26 ± 0.88 | 0.30 ± 0.15 |
| 3,5-dichlorophenol (3,5-DCP) | 14.8 ± 4.04 | 2.29 ± 0.55 | 26.9 ± 5.12 | 3.0 ± 0.28 | 4.38 ± 0.98 |
| Aniline | 1,362 ± 43.5 | 1,251 ± 39.9 | 2,136 ± 64.1 | 1,683.5 ± 388 | 552.4 ± 151.3 |
| 3,5-dichloroaniline (3,5-DCA) | 47.6 ± 7.34 | 49.8 ± 5.87 | 56.7 ± 8.16 | 51.14 ± 7.2 | 47.59 ± 12.8 |
50% M9 medium supplemented with 0.05% glucose and 0.25% cas-aminocids;
0.45% NaCl supplemented with 0.001% leucine;
2% NaCl;
statistically different (p < 0.05) from the EC50 value in GAA-M9 for the same chemical and the same bacterial strain;
statistically different (p < 0.05) from the EC50 value of the E. coli in Leu-saline for the same chemical.
Figure 2.Toxicity (30-min EC50, mg/L) of seven standard chemicals to recombinant Escherichia coli strains MC1061(pDNlux) and (pSLlux) in two different media: GAA-M9 (A) and Leu-saline (B) Testing was performed at 30 °C. Log-log R2 value for panel A: 0.97 (p < 0.01) and for panel B: 0.99 (p < 0.01). Data are plotted from Table 2.
Figure 3.Toxicity (30-min EC50, mg/L) of seven standard chemicals to (A) recombinant Escherichia coli strains MC1061(pSLlux) and (B) (pDNLlux) in Leu-saline (30 °C) versus Vibrio fischeri in 2% saline (20 °C). Log-log R2 value for panel A: 0.70 (p < 0.05) and for panel B: 0.75 (p < 0.01). Data are plotted from Table 2.