| Literature DB >> 26401457 |
Abstract
Biological containment is a genetic technique that programs dangerous organisms to grow only in the laboratory and to die in the natural environment. Auxotrophy for a substance not found in the natural environment is an ideal biological containment. Here, we constructed an Escherichia coli strain that cannot survive in the absence of the unnatural amino acid 3-iodo-L-tyrosine. This synthetic auxotrophy was achieved by conditional production of the antidote protein against the highly toxic enzyme colicin E3. An amber stop codon was inserted in the antidote gene. The translation of the antidote mRNA was controlled by a translational switch using amber-specific 3-iodo-L-tyrosine incorporation. The antidote is synthesized only when 3-iodo-L-tyrosine is present in the culture medium. The viability of this strain rapidly decreased with less than a 1 h half-life after removal of 3-iodo-L-tyrosine, suggesting that the decay of the antidote causes the host killing by activated colicin E3 in the absence of this unnatural amino acid. The contained strain grew 1.5 times more slowly than the parent strains. The escaper frequency was estimated to be 1.4 mutations (95% highest posterior density 1.1-1.8) per 10(5) cell divisions. This containment system can be constructed by only plasmid introduction without genome editing, suggesting that this system may be applicable to other microbes carrying toxin-antidote systems similar to that of colicin E3.Entities:
Keywords: Auxotrophy; Biological containment; Colicin; Mutation rate; Toxin–antitoxin system; Unnatural amino acids
Year: 2015 PMID: 26401457 PMCID: PMC4579030 DOI: 10.7717/peerj.1247
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PeerJ ISSN: 2167-8359 Impact factor: 2.984
Figure 1Construction of a bacterium auxotrophic for IY.
(A) Schematic of the gene circuit for a synthetic IY-auxotrophy. The IY-auxotrophic E. coli strain BL21-AI(IY,1amb-immE3) was constructed by introduction of two plasmids, pSH350(1amb-immE3) and pTYR MjIYRS2-1(D286)MJR1X3. The former plasmid encodes a highly toxic RNase ColE3 and an antidote ImmE3. immE3 was modified as described below. IYRS and MJR1 genes are encoded in the latter plasmid. The translation of ImmE3 is regulated by the IY-controlling translational switch. (B) Alteration of immE3. An amber stop codon was inserted next to the translation start codon ATG. This inserted amber codon is the site of IY incorporation. (C) IY-dependent translation of ImmE3. IY is incorporated at the site of the inserted amber stop codon in the presence of IYRS and MJR1, resulting in the successful translation of ImmE3 encoded downstream of the amber codon. The translation is interrupted in the absence of IY. RF1, peptide chain release factor 1. (D) Expected responses. The antidote (ImmE3) is produced in the presence of IY (in the laboratory), thus neutralizing the toxin (ColE3), and the host bacterium survives. In contrast, the antidote is not produced in the absence of IY (in the natural environment), thus the toxin is expressed, and the host bacterium is killed.
Figure 2Characterization of the constructed bacterium.
(A) Evaluation of IY-auxotrophy. Ten thousand viable BL21-AI(IY,1amb-immE3) bacterial cells were inoculated as several drops onto a solid medium. Then the drops were spread by inclining the plates. The resulting “twiggy pattern” of colonies was an artifact of this incomplete coverage of the plate. Left, an IY-containing medium; right, an IY-free medium. (B) Rate of killing. IY in the medium was removed at time 0. The number of viable cells is normalized (the value at time 0 = 1). n = 4 independent experiments using separate bacterial cultures. (C) Growth curves. BL21-AI(IY,1amb-immE3), the parent strain carrying pSH350, and a vector control carrying pBR322 instead of pSH350 were tested. All tested strains maintain pTYR MjIYRS2-1(D286)MJR1X3. The OD590 was normalized (the value at 60 min = 1). n = 3 independent experiments using separate bacterial cultures. Data (B and C) are shown as means ± SEM.
Calculation of escape frequency.
Escaper generation rates were estimated by a fluctuation assay using the web tool FALCOR.
| MSS Maximum likelihood method | |
|---|---|
|
| |
| Mutations (m) | 32.5 |
| Mutation rate (per 105) | 1.4 |
| 95% CI range (Upper Bound) | 1.8 |
| 95% CI range (Lower Bound) | 1.1 |
| 95% CI difference (Upper Difference) | 0.4 |
| 95% CI difference (Lower Difference) | 0.4 |
|
| |
| Avaraged number of inoculated bacteria (N) | 2.3 × 106 |
| Avaraged number of escapers (m) | 148.9 |
| Number of cultures required to achieve a theoretical precision of 20% for MSS-ML | <2 |
| Number of cultures in this experiment | 9 |
| Result | Reliable |
Notes.
Luria & Delbrück (1943).
Hall et al. (2009).
Ma, Sandri & Sarkar (1992).
Rosche & Foster (2000).