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Merck
CN

Designer cells programming quorum-sensing interference with microbes.

Nature communications (2018-05-10)
Ferdinand Sedlmayer, Dennis Hell, Marius Müller, David Ausländer, Martin Fussenegger
ABSTRACT

Quorum sensing is a promising target for next-generation anti-infectives designed to address evolving bacterial drug resistance. The autoinducer-2 (AI-2) is a key quorum-sensing signal molecule which regulates bacterial group behaviors and is recognized by many Gram-negative and Gram-positive bacteria. Here we report a synthetic mammalian cell-based microbial-control device that detects microbial chemotactic formyl peptides through a formyl peptide sensor (FPS) and responds by releasing AI-2. The microbial-control device was designed by rewiring an artificial receptor-based signaling cascade to a modular biosynthetic AI-2 production platform. Mammalian cells equipped with the microbial-control gene circuit detect formyl peptides secreted from various microbes with high sensitivity and respond with robust AI-2 production, resulting in control of quorum sensing-related behavior of pathogenic Vibrio harveyi and attenuation of biofilm formation by the human pathogen Candida albicans. The ability to manipulate mixed microbial populations through fine-tuning of AI-2 levels may provide opportunities for future anti-infective strategies.

MATERIALS
Product Number
Brand
Product Description

Millipore
MRS Agar, Vegitone, suitable for microbiology, NutriSelect® Plus
Sigma-Aldrich
Anti-Actin antibody produced in rabbit, affinity isolated antibody, buffered aqueous solution
Sigma-Aldrich
Human Serum, from human male AB plasma, USA origin, sterile-filtered
Sigma-Aldrich
Ampicillin sodium salt