Team:LMU-Munich

From 2014.igem.org

(Difference between revisions)
(»BaKillus«)
Line 48: Line 48:
<div id="home-footer">
<div id="home-footer">
-
<h1>contact us</h1>
 
-
<h2><a href="mailto:igem@bio.lmu.de">igem@bio.lmu.de</a></h2>
 
<a  href="http://www.lmu.de" target="_blank">
<a  href="http://www.lmu.de" target="_blank">
<img src="https://preview.c9.io/loxos/igemlmu/img/lmu-logo-2.png" />
<img src="https://preview.c9.io/loxos/igemlmu/img/lmu-logo-2.png" />

Revision as of 03:22, 18 October 2014

»BaKillus«

Engineering a pathogen-hunting microbe


Increasing bacterial resistance to classical antibiotics remains a serious threat and urges the development of novel pathogen-killing strategies. Exploiting bacterial communication mechanisms such as quorum sensing is a promising strategy to specifically target certain pathogens. The major aim of this project is the introduction of a genetic circuit enabling Bacillus subtilis to actively detect, attach to, and eventually kill Staphylococcus aureus and Streptococcus pneumoniae.

Initially, we will introduce the autoinducer-sensing two-component systems of S. aureus and S. pneumoniae into B. subtilis. to create a pathogen-detecting strain. By utilizing quorum sensing-dependent promoters, we will then trigger pathogen-killing strategies like the production of antimicrobial peptides or biofilm degradation. As a safety measure a delayed suicide-switch guarantees non-persistence of genetically modified B. subtilis in the absence of pathogens. We envision the use of BaKillus as a smart, cheap and simple-to-use medical device for diagnostics and targeted treatment of multiresistant zupahbugs.