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Parsed synthesis of pyocyanin via co-culture enables context-dependent intercellular redox communication
- Source :
- Microbial Cell Factories, Vol 20, Iss 1, Pp 1-13 (2021), Microbial Cell Factories
- Publication Year :
- 2021
- Publisher :
- BMC, 2021.
-
Abstract
- Background Microbial co-cultures and consortia are of interest in cell-based molecular production and even as “smart” therapeutics in that one can take advantage of division of labor and specialization to expand both the range of available functions and mechanisms for control. The development of tools that enable coordination and modulation of consortia will be crucial for future application of multi-population cultures. In particular, these systems would benefit from an expanded toolset that enables orthogonal inter-strain communication. Results We created a co-culture for the synthesis of a redox-active phenazine signaling molecule, pyocyanin (PYO), by dividing its synthesis into the generation of its intermediate, phenazine carboxylic acid (PCA) from the first strain, followed by consumption of PCA and generation of PYO in a second strain. Interestingly, both PCA and PYO can be used to actuate gene expression in cells engineered with the soxRS oxidative stress regulon, although importantly this signaling activity was found to depend on growth media. That is, like other signaling motifs in bacterial systems, the signaling activity is context dependent. We then used this co-culture’s phenazine signals in a tri-culture to modulate gene expression and production of three model products: quorum sensing molecule autoinducer-1 and two fluorescent marker proteins, eGFP and DsRed. We also showed how these redox-based signals could be intermingled with other quorum-sensing (QS) signals which are more commonly used in synthetic biology, to control complex behaviors. To provide control over product synthesis in the tri-cultures, we also showed how a QS-induced growth control module could guide metabolic flux in one population and at the same time guide overall tri-culture function. Specifically, we showed that phenazine signal recognition, enabled through the oxidative stress response regulon soxRS, was dependent on media composition such that signal propagation within our parsed synthetic system could guide different desired outcomes based on the prevailing environment. In doing so, we expanded the range of signaling molecules available for coordination and the modes by which they can be utilized to influence overall function of a multi-population culture. Conclusions Our results show that redox-based signaling can be intermingled with other quorum sensing signaling in ways that enable user-defined control of microbial consortia yielding various outcomes defined by culture medium. Further, we demonstrated the utility of our previously designed growth control module in influencing signal propagation and metabolic activity is unimpeded by orthogonal redox-based signaling. By exploring novel multi-modal strategies for guiding communication and consortia outcome, the concepts introduced here may prove to be useful for coordination of multiple populations within complex microbial systems.
- Subjects :
- Cell signaling
Population
Microbial Consortia
Bioengineering
Context (language use)
Computational biology
Applied Microbiology and Biotechnology
Microbiology
Redox
Synthetic biology
chemistry.chemical_compound
Pyocyanin
Bacterial Proteins
Growth control
education
education.field_of_study
Molecular communication
Research
Gene Expression Regulation, Bacterial
QR1-502
Quorum sensing
Regulon
chemistry
Metabolic Engineering
Pseudomonas aeruginosa
Pyocyanine
Phenazines
Synthetic Biology
Co-culture
Oxidation-Reduction
Biotechnology
Signal Transduction
Subjects
Details
- Language :
- English
- ISSN :
- 14752859
- Volume :
- 20
- Issue :
- 1
- Database :
- OpenAIRE
- Journal :
- Microbial Cell Factories
- Accession number :
- edsair.doi.dedup.....e893a18215ad942fe045085f70f1e78c