Team:Wageningen UR/project/fungal sensing

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  <h4><a href="#header">Fungal inhibition</a></h4>
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                                        <h4><a href="#header">Sensing</a></h4>
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                                        <a href="#fasensing">FA Sensing</a>
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  <a href="#overview">Overview</a>
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                                            <li><a href="#overview1">Overview</a></li>
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                                        <a href="#resistance">Resistance</a>
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                                            <li><a href="#approach2">Approach</a></li>
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                                            <li><a href="#results2">Results</a></li>
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  <a href="#biobricks">BioBricks</a>
   
   
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        <h1>Fungal inhibition</h1>
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<h1>Fungal Sensing</h1>
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<p>When we designed BananaGuard, we wanted it to be <b>effective</b>, <b>safe</b> and <b>specific</b> in fighting <i>Fusarium oxysporum f. sp. cubense (foc)</i>. This part describes how our product is specific in only targeting this fungus and not affecting other soil fungi. <br>
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<br>The pathogenic fungus <i>F. oxysporum</i> secretes fusaric acid, a toxin needed to invade the banana plant via the roots. <i>Pseudomonas putida</i>, which serves us as a platform for the development of our biological control agent. Here the engineered <i>Pseudomonas putida</i> needs to be able to sense fusaric acid and activate gene expression accordingly. Resistance to fusaric acid is also crucial in this process and we found that <i>Pseudomonas putida</i> already possesses a good base level of resistance [1]. To be able to transfer our system to different platforms, we aim to introduce fusaric acid resistance in <i>Escherichia coli</i>.</p><br>
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            <h2>Overview</h2>
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<h2>Fusaric Acid Sensing</h2>
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<p>In order to inhibit <i>F.oxysproum</i> growth, several anti-fungal substances will be produced when fusaric acid is sensed. Those being 2,4-DAPG, chitinase, DMDS,DMTS and pyoverdine. 2,4-DAPG or 2,4-Diacetylphloroglucinol is a widely used antiobiotic against plant pathogens. Chitinase is a lytic enzyme that breaks down fungal cell walls. Dimethyldisulfide (DMDS) and dimethyltrisulfide (DMTS) are sulfur by-products produced by <i>P.putida</i> and have shown to produce plant growth and inhibit <i>F.oxyposrum</i> respectively. And lastly, pyoverdines are iron chelating compounds that are produced when iron is limited in order to scavenge for iron to induce iron competition.  With these anti-fungal substances our engineered <i>P.putida</i>will be able to sense <i>F.oxypsroum</i> and in turn produce substances that will eliminate or inhibit <i>F.oxysporum</i> in the soil.
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<h3>2,4-Diacetylphloroglucinol(2,4-DAPG)</h3>
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<p>2,4-DAPG, full name 2,4-diacetylphloroglucinol is an antibiotic that is widely used in the agricultural industry against pathogens. It’s a broad spectrum antibiotic has been shown to play a key role in the biological control of various plant pathogens including <i>F. oxysporum</i>(Belgrove 2007). In addition to that, it has also shown to induce systematic resistance (ISR) in plants (Rezzonico, Zala et al. 2007). Since <i>P. putida</i> does not produce DAPG by itself, a gene cluster obtained from <i>P.flourescens</i> will be introduced into <i>P. putida</i>. The <i>phl</i> gene cluster contains eight genes, from <i>phlA</i> to <i>phlH</i>. Gene cluster <i>phlABCDE</i> was be used for this project as literature has shown that <i>phlABCD</i> are synthesis genes(see figure 1) and <i>phlE</i> codes for an efflux pump (Bangera and Thomashow 1999) (Abbas, McGuire et al. 2004). <i>phlABCD</i> has been expressed before in <i>P.putida</i> and has shown to produce 2,4-DAPG (Bakker, Glandorf et al. 2002).</p>
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<img src="https://static.igem.org/mediawiki/2014/d/db/Wageningen_UR_project_funga_linhibition_dapg_pathway.png"/> <figcaption style="font-size:11px;font-weight:bold">Figure 1.2,4-DAPG synthesis pathway (Loper 2009)
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<h3>Dimethyldisulfide (DMDS) and dimethyltrisulfide (DMTS)</h3>
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<p>When breaking down methionine for ammonium, methanethiol gets formed as a side product. Then methanethiol gets oxidized into dimethyldisulphide (DMDS) and dimethyltrisulphide (DMTS) (see figure 2). DMTS was shown to have an inhibitory effect against <i>F.oxysporum</i>  with starting inhibition of 78% but then slowly declined to 26% (Zhang, Mallik et al. 2013). DMDS is used as plant growth promoter and at the same time also shown a slight inhibition to foc of 10% (Meldau, Meldau et al. 2013). Both DMTS and DMDS are naturally produced in <i>P. putida</i> but a higher production is desired. One thing that causes low yield of DMDS is the low affinity of methionine-γ-lyase to methionine meaning less formation of methanethiol, which then leads to low DMTS and DMDS production. So it was thought to overexpress an enzyme that has a higher affinity towards methionine and will therefore increase DMDS and DMTS production, this enyzme is a Methionine-γ-lyase from <i>Brevibacterium linens</i> that has shown to increase DMDS in <i>Lactocossus lactis</i> (Hanniffy, Philo et al. 2009). This gene was codon optimized and synthetically made for <i>P.putida</i>.</p>
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<img src="https://static.igem.org/mediawiki/2014/e/ef/Wageningen_UR_project_fungal_inhibition_dmds_pathway.png"width="60%"/> <figcaption style="font-size:11px;font-weight:bold">Figure 2.Dimethyldisulfate (DMDS) and dimethyltrisulfate pathway.
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<h3>Pyoverdine</h3>
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<p>Pyoverdines are siderophores produced by <i>P.putida</i> (Ravel and Cornelis 2003, Matthijs, Laus et al. 2009). Siderophores are small green/yellow fluorescent compounds that have high affinity to iron(III) that in the end can lead to iron competition. Due to iron starvation, the growth of pathogenic fungi and bacteria in the rhizosphere will be restricted (Duijff, Meijer et al. 1993). It was shown that there was a direct correlation of siderophore production and their inhibition to germination of chlamydospores of F.oxysporum (Elad and Baker 1985). In addition to that, siderophores have also been shown to induce resistance in radish plants (Nagarajkumar, Bhaskaran et al. 2004). However the effects of siderophore decreases when the disease incidence increases above 74% (Duijff, Bakker et al. 1994). <i>P. putida</i> WCS358 is able to produce a siderophore, pseudobactin 358 (PBS358), which has been shown to be involved in inhibition of Fusarium (Lemanceau, Bakker et al. 1992).
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Pyoverdine production is iron dependent as it is regulated by a ferric uptake regulator protein(Fur), see figure 4 (Dos Santos, Heim et al. 2004). PfrI is a transcription activator that is needed for activation of genes involved in pyoverdine synthesis (Venturi, Ottevanger et al. 1995). So an overexpression was be done of <i>pfrI</i> that would have pyoverdine production, even when in an iron abundant environment.</p>
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<img src="https://static.igem.org/mediawiki/2014/e/ec/Wageningen_UR_project_antifungal_inhibition_pyoverdine_structure.png"/> <figcaption style="font-size:11px;font-weight:bold">Figure 3.Pyoverdine structure(Venturi, Weisbeek et al. 1995)
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<img src="https://static.igem.org/mediawiki/2014/5/55/Wageningen_UR_project_antifunal_inhibition_fur_regulation_siderophore.png"/> <figcaption style="font-size:11px;font-weight:bold">Figure 4.Fur regulation of siderophore genes(Venturi, Weisbeek et al. 1995)
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<h3>Chitinase </h3>
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<p>Chitinase is a hydrolytic enzyme that breaks down hydrolytic bonds in chitin and is produced in both bacteria and plants and has shown to be useful in biological control against fungi (Mauch, Mauch-Mani et al. 1988, Herrera-Estrella and Chet 1999). In bacteria their function is to attack shellfish animals or fungi, and degrade their cell wall. In plants they are known as pathogen related (PR) proteins that are involved in the induced systematic resistance of plants in order to defend themselves against pathogens. <i>P. putida</i> KT2440 has a lytic enzyme PP3066 that is predicted to have chitinase activity, so a overexpression of this gene was done in order to increase chitinase production. </p>
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<h2>Results</h2>
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<h3>2,4-Diacetylphloroglucinol(2,4-DAPG)</h3>
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<p><i>PhlABCDE</i> was successfully cloned and put into SEVA 254 plasmid. Transformed in both <i>E.coli</i> and <i>P.putida</i> KT2440. Transformants were verified via colony PCR. For <i>P.putida</i> there was difficulty when doing colony PCR with Taq polymerase. It was never successful to get a full 5.4kbp band doing colony PCR with <i>P.putida</i> but when using a primer pair that forms a 1kbp product, it was then possible to see positive transformants. The method used High-performance liquid chromatography (HPLC) was correct <a class="soft_link" href="https://static.igem.org/mediawiki/2014/0/07/Wageningen_UR_protocols_DAPGprotocols.pdf">(see protocol)</a>. Standard were detected a standard curve was made. However, verifying production of 2,4-DAPG via HPLC turned out to be difficult due to a lot of background noise of the samples, even after doing an extraction step. </p>
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<img src="https://static.igem.org/mediawiki/2014/7/7c/Wageningen_UR_project_antifungal_inhibition_dapg_standard_curve.png"width="60%"/> <figcaption>Figure 5.2,4-DAPG HPLC standard curve.
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<p>In order to test 2,4-DAPG against <i>Fusarium</i>, a in vitro assay was done on komada agar plates. Where different concentration of pure 2,4-DAPG were plated and then inoculated with a 5mm <i>Fusarium</i> plug. Plates were then incubated in 25°C for several days.</p><br/><br/>
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<img src="https://static.igem.org/mediawiki/2014/1/1f/Wageningen_UR_Project_fungal_inhibition_in_vitro_dapg1.png"width="100%"/> <figcaption>Figure 6.In vitro assay with pure 2,4-DAPG .
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<p>Resistance to fusaric acid is found in several microorganisms, such as <i>Stenotrophomonas maltophilia</i> [3] and <i>Pseudomonas putida</i> [4]. This resistance to the toxic compound is due to a fusaric acid efflux pump, which pumps the acid out of the cell. After doing a literature search, we found out that there are a few proteins encoded in the genome of <i>P. putida</i> KT2440 which should confer fusaric acid resistance based on <i>in silico</i> prediction. The corresponding genes are all found placed in an operon cluster starting from pp1263 to pp1266 [4]. Upstream of this region and transcribed to the opposite direction we found the pp1262 gene whose predicted function is a LysR-type regulator.<br><br>
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Based on the above predictions and the gene topology, we hypothesized that since fusaric acid resistance from this cluster has not been confirmed through experiments it was worth to try to check if the theoretical regulator pp1262 can control the expression of the gene cluster through a promoter in the intergenic area. Based on this hypothesis, expression of the pp1262 protein should repress transcription of the operon cluster in the absence of fusaric acid. On the other side, when fusaric acid is present, repression should be relieved. To further support that this is how the system works and that fusaric acid does not activate the regulator leading to higher transcription rates of the resistance cluster, we expect that when the regulator is overexpressed in <i>P. putida</i>, it causes lower fusaric acid resistance because of lower depression rate of the promoter (Figure 1). Hence, we isolated pp1262 and the intergenic region and put it into a BioBrick, effectively acting together as a fusaric acid inducible promoter (FAiP).
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<p>From figure 6 it can be seen that with an increase of 2,4-DAPG there is a decrease in <i>Fusarium</i> growth. However when it reached to 100ug/ml results were not reproducible with one plate having more growth that the other. Afterwards another in vitro experiment was set up to test 2,4-DAPG concentration from 100-400ug/ml. However here spores (3.87E+07 spores/ml) were used instead of <i>Fusarium</i> plug due to unavailability of a fresh <i>Fusarium plug</i> on agar plate.Plates were then incubated in 25°C for several days.</p><br/><br/>
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<img src="https://static.igem.org/mediawiki/2014/2/27/Wageningen_UR_project_fungal_inhibition_in_vitro_dapg2.png"width="70%"/> <figcaption>Figure 7.In vitro assay with pure 2,4-DAPG with spores (3.87E+07 spores/ml)
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<p>When comparing figure 6 and 7 it can be seen that when inoculated with spores even in 5 days there is absolutely no growth of <i>Fusarium</i> whereas when for <i>Fusarium</i> there is growth after 6 days with mixed results at a concentration of 100ug/ml 2,4-DAPG. After in vitro assay, an in vivo assay was also done using our tranformants containing the <i>phl</i> gene cluster that let <i>P.putida</i> produce 2,4-DAPG. An overnight <i>P.putida</i> liquid culture was spreaded on a LB agar plate, grown overnight in 30°C and then inoculated with a 5mm <i>Fusarium</i> plug.</p>
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<img src="https://static.igem.org/mediawiki/2014/1/16/Wageningen_UR_project_fungal_inhibition_fusarium_spread_dapg.png"width="70%"/> <figcaption>Figure 8.In vivo assay, <i>P.putida</i> (2,4-DAPG) co-inoculated with <i>Fusarium</i
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<p>In figure 8, plates were modified with a red circle to better visualize the fungal disc. It can be seen that the wild type <i>P.putida</i> KT24400 already inhibits <i>Fusarium</i> (foc control) very well. Our tranformant (DAPG) seems to show a slightly small <i>Fusarium</i> disc when comparing it with the wildtype.</p>
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<h3>Dimethyldisulfide (DMDS) and dimethyltrisulfide (DMTS) </h3>
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<p>Methionine-γ-lyase was successfully made into a a biobrick <a class="soft_link" href="http://parts.igem.org/Part:BBa_K1493300"> (Bba_K1493300)</a>. It was then put into SEVA 254 plasmid. Transformed in both <i>E.coli</i> and <i>P.putida</i> KT2440. Transformants could be verified via colony PCR for <i>E.coli</i> and <i>P.putida</i>.<i>P.putida</i> were grown, induced and harvested 3 hours later. Cells were lysed via sonification and were then used for an assay. DMDS and DMTS were suppose to be measured via Gas Chromatography (GC)<a class="soft_link" href="https://static.igem.org/mediawiki/2014/4/4b/Wageningen_UR_protocols_MgLgrowth.pdf">(see protocol)</a>.But it was in the end not possible due to unexpected problems with the GC machines. However an in vivo assay was done co-inoculating our transformed <i>P.putida</i> with <i>Fusarium</i>. </p>
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<img src="https://static.igem.org/mediawiki/2014/d/d8/Wageningen_UR_project_fungal_inhibition_fusarium_spread_MgL.png"width="70%"/>
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<figcaption>Fig 9.In vivo assay, <i>P.putida</i> (Methionine-γ-lyase) co-inoculated with <i>Fusarium</i>
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<p>In figure 9 it can be seen when comparing our transformant containing Methionine-γ-lyase with the wildtype <i>P.putida</i> there is a much small fungal disc meaning a higher inhibition of our transformant. </p>
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<img src="https://static.igem.org/mediawiki/2014/a/a2/Wageningen_UR_sensings_Faip10.jpg">
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<p>Pfri was successfully made into a a biobrick <a class="soft_link" href="http://parts.igem.org/Part:BBa_K1493200"> (Bba_K1493200)</a>, validated and characterized. <i>PfrI</i> was cloned and put into SEVA 254 plasmid. Transformed in both <i>E.coli</i> and <i>P.putida</i> KT2440 and checked via colony PCR. Afterwards growth experiments were done in minimal M9 medium supplemented with Iron and pyoverdine was measured using spectrophotometer. When grown overnight it was possible to see that Pfri transformants were slightly greener when compared to the control. Control used here was a <i>P.putida</i> containing an empty plasmid.</p>
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<figcaption>Figure 1. Hypothetical fusaric acid efflux pump operon present in the genome of <i>Pseudomonas putida</i> KT2440. When fusaric acid enters the cell, the inhibition of the efflux pump is inhibited and the efflux pump is transcribed, resulting in the excretion of fusaric acid out of the cell. For the sensing part of this iGEM project, only the detection part is used.</figcaption>
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<p>We decided to test and characterize the fusaric acid sensitivity and expression of this part by using different levels of fusaric acid. The promoter was tested using GFP and RFP reporter genes (<a class="soft_link" href="http://parts.igem.org/Part:BBa_I13507">BBa_I13507</a>, <a class="soft_link" href="http://parts.igem.org/Part:BBa_I13504">BBa_I13504</a>, <a class="soft_link" href="http://parts.igem.org/Part:BBa_J23100">BBa_J23100</a>) as output. Each BioBrick part contains our promoter, an RBS, a reporter gene and two terminators (Figure 2). The new constructs were expressed in <i>P. putida</i> to test for expression in the presence of fusaric acid. </p>
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<img src="https://static.igem.org/mediawiki/2014/3/3b/Wageningen_UR_sensings_Faip11.jpg">
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<figcaption>Figure 2. The complete construct containing both our fusaric acid inducible promoter and a reporter gene.</figcaption>
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<figcaption>Fig1.Pyoverdine spectrum(350-400nm)OD corrected.
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<p>To isolate the pp1262 gene and the downstream intergenic region, two promoters containing the RFC10 parts were used in a PCR reaction on the genomic DNA of <i>P. putida</i> KT2440. The product was ligated into pSB1C3 and transformed into chemically competent <i>E. coli</i> cells. The part was digested again and ligated upstream of several different reporter genes. BBa_I13507, which contains an RBS, mRFP and two terminators was successfully transformed. However, after sequencing it became clear that this BioBrick did not contain mRFP, making it <a class="soft_link" href="http://parts.igem.org/Part:BBa_I13507:Experience#User_Reviews">unsuitable for this experiment</a>. This problem has been reported to the registry. BBa_I13504 - which contains an RBS, GFP and two terminators - was used for further experiments. This reporter construct combined with our promoter part was ligated and transformed into <i>E. coli</i>. Sequencing confirmed the successful assembly. This construct should only show green fluorescence in the presence of fusaric acid, and no fluorescence when fusaric acid is absent. <br><br>
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The <i>E. coli</i> cells, containing the construct were grown on agar plates containing different concentrations of fusaric acid. At 140µM, there was no significant difference between the transformed cells and the control cells. At higher concentrations the cells died, due to their inability to pump the acid out of the cell. Since small amounts of fusaric acid are lethal to <i>E. coli</i>, this is not suitable as a host to test the expression.<br><br>
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<p>In figure 1 it can be seen that the peak (400nm) of <i>Pfri</i> transforamant is higher than the peak from a <i>P.putida</i> containing an empty plasmid.</p>
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The construct was transformed into a different backbone (pSB1K3) and inserted into electrocompetent <i>P. putida</i> cells. The transformed cells were again grown on plates containing different concentrations of fusaric acid. A slight difference in colour could be observed between the transformed cells and the wild-type cells, indicating that the promoter is only active when fusaric acid is present (see Figure 3). </p>
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<img src="https://static.igem.org/mediawiki/2014/6/65/Wageningen_UR_sensing_Faip2.jpg"><figcaption>Figure 3. Both plates contain 4 strains of transformed <i>P. putida</i>, containing the <a class="soft_link" href="http://parts.igem.org/Part:BBa_K1493003">BBa_K1493003</a>. The right plate contains 50µg/ml kanamycin and 50µg/ml fusaric acid, whereas the left plate only contains 50µg/ml kanamycin. A slightly increased fluorescence can be observed in the right plate, indicating the promoter is induced by the fusaric acid.</figcaption></figure><p><br/>
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A growth experiment was performed in a 96-wells plate, containing 0, 55, 140, 285, 565 and 1415µM (0, 10, 25, 50, 100 and 250µg/ml) fusaric acid and both transformed and wild-type <i>P. putida</i> cells. After 18h, at a concentration of 285µM fusaric acid, the transformed cells showed more fluorescence than the wild-type cells, while both strains showed no fluorescence when no fusaric acid was added, indicating that the promoter is not active when no fusaric acid is present. <br><br>
 +
The wild-type <i>P. putida</i> cells showed some fluorescence as well. We hypothesized that the stress caused by fusaric acid caused the excretion of additional fluorescent compounds, such as pyoverdine. Also, we found that LB medium has some auto-fluorescence. Since GFP does not include an excretion tag, we solved this problem by removing the supernatant by washing the cells with PBS and measuring the clean cells afterwards. <br><br>
 +
After washing with PBS, the wild-type cells showed no significant fluorescence, whereas the transformed cells clearly did, (see Figure 4.) indicating that the promoter is functional in this experiment. </p>
-
<figure><img src="https://static.igem.org/mediawiki/2014/4/4b/Wageningen_UR_registry_k1493200_boxplot_pyoverdine_400nm_w._error_bars.png"width="55%"/><figcaption>Fig2.Pyoverdine absorbance at 400nm with error bars,OD corrected.
+
-
</figcaption></figure>
+
<figure>
 +
<img src="https://static.igem.org/mediawiki/2014/9/93/Wageningen_UR_sensing_average_fluorescence_at_280uM_fusaric_acid.png"><figcaption>Figure 4. Both <i>P. putida</i> strains are grown in LB medium with 285µM fusaric acid and washed with PBS. GFP fluorescence was checked for 6 samples of each, at 395nm excitation and 501 nm emission. This experiment shows that the promoter is active in the presence of fusaric acid. However, the value of the fluorescence is a dimentionless unit relative to the wild-type, which means a characterized promoter with a downstream GFP gene should be added to the experiment as a positive control to characterize this fusaric acid induced promoter.</figcaption></figure><p><br/>
 +
<p>Futhermore, the WT cells showed growth on all concentrations of fusaric acid, whereas the transformed cells did not survive a fusaric acid concentration of 565µM and higher (see Figure 5), which supports our hypothesis that the inserted vector decreased the fusaric acid resistance of our transformed <i>P. putida</i> cells.</p>
 +
<figure>
 +
<img src="https://static.igem.org/mediawiki/2014/a/a7/Wageningen_UR_sensing_Faip23.jpg"><figcaption>Figure 5. Fusaric Acid does not seem to influence the growth of the wild-type <i>P. putida</i>, whereas the transformed cells do not survive a concentration 565µM or higher.</figcaption></figure><p><br/>
 +
<p>A new growth experiment was set up, using M9 medium instead of LB medium, to prevent fluorescent background noise of the medium. In this experiment both the WT <i>P. putida</i> and <i>P. putida</i> containing <a class="soft_link" href="http://parts.igem.org/Part:BBa_K1493000">BBa_K1493000</a> are grown in a 96-wells plate at 0, 85, 170, 255, 340 and 425µM (0, 15, 30, 45, 60 and 75µg/ml) fusaric acid. Furthermore, <i>E. coli</i> DH5α cells (WT and <a class="soft_link" href="http://parts.igem.org/Part:BBa_K741002">BBa BBa_K741002</a>) were also grown in the same plate but without fusaric acid. The transformed <i>E. coli</i> has a well characterized promoter (pLac) with the same GFP gene downstream. (See Figure 6.) By comparing the fluorescence of our fusaric acid induced promoter at different fusaric acid concentrations to this constitutive promoter, characterization is performed. pLac is used as a constitutive promoter, which has shown activity <a class="soft_link" href="http://parts.igem.org/Part:BBa_R0010:Experience">without induction of IPTG</a>.</p>
 +
 +
<figure>
 +
<img src="https://static.igem.org/mediawiki/2014/7/7e/Wageningen_UR_sensing_Faip20.jpg" width="80%"><figcaption>Figure 6. <br>*Significantly different from WT with p<0.05<br>The measurement is based on GFP fluorescence in <i>P. putida</i> at increased concentrations of fusaric acid to prove and characterize the activity of the fusaric acid induced promoter, <a class="soft_link" href="http://parts.igem.org/Part:BBa_K1493000">BBa_K1493000</a>. For comparison, the well characterized pLac promoter (<a class="soft_link" href="http://parts.igem.org/Part:BBa_K741002">BBa_K741002</a>, uninduced by IPTG) was used to quantify the activity of this promoter at different concentrations of fusaric acid. Our fusaric acid inducible promoter does not respond to low concentrations up to 170µM. From 255µM and up, the activity increases. The maximum measured activity of the promoter is 0.21 RPU at 425µM. </figcaption></figure><br/>
 +
</p>
 +
<section id="results1">
 +
<h3>Discussion</h3>
 +
</section>
 +
<p>Up to now, the regulation of this fusaric acid efflux pump was only theoretical. The literature [4,5] merely suggested a possibility in the regulation of the efflux pump yet no data is shown whatsoever but from these results the following conclusions can be drawn.<br>
 +
The hypothesis that the combination of the inhibiting LysR-type gene[5] and the promoter in the intergenic region is indeed fusaric acid inducible is supported by the results of the growth experiment in Figure 6. To activate the promoter, the concentration of fusaric acid has to pass a certain threshold.<br>
 +
To further support this hypothesis, it was observed that the transformed <i>P. putida</i> cells did not survive a fusaric acid concentration of 565µM or higher, likely because of over-expression of the inhibiting gene pp1262, which would not only inhibit the activity of the GFP but also of the original fusaric acid efflux pump in the original genome of <i>P. putida</i>, therefore decreasing the resistance of the host.<br>
 +
These experiments do not only give some good indications that the functioning of this promoter is indeed regulated by the induction of fusaric acid, but they also show that this regulator could actually be used for other purposes, such as in our case the detection of <i>Fusarium oxysporum</i> and producing anti-fungal agents in its presence. A fusaric acid detection system has not been developed before now, and the implications of this part could very likely exceed this iGEM project. </p>
-
<br/><br/>
+
<section id="future1">
 +
<h3>Future work</h3>
 +
</section>
 +
<p>During this iGEM project, we also tried to isolate the promoter from the original <i>P. putida</i> KT2440 genome without the inhibiting gene, but we were unsuccessful to do so. However, while performing mutagenesis on the BioBrick to remove the illegal restriction site PstI, an unintentional insert was introduced, causing a frame shift in the inhibiting gene, possibly disabling its function, leaving the promoter uninhibited. When this part would be inserted into <i>P. putida</i>, the over-expression of the inhibiting gene would be gone. Note that using this part is only possible in <i>P. putida</i> for this reason.<br><br>
-
<p>When looking only at the aborbance at 400nm (figure2), it can be seen that there is a 4 fold increase of pyoverdine production when <i>Pfri</i> is overexpressed in <i>P.putida</i>. </p>
+
By introducing this part to <i>P. putida</i> and growing it at the same time as the tested transformed <i>P. putida</i> used in the previous experiments, the fusaric acid resistance can be compared between the two strains. Hypothetically, the new strain could have a higher resistance, because the overexpression of the inhibiting gene is dysfunctional and therefore cannot block the fusaric acid efflux pump in the original genome. We did not have time to test this yet.</p>
 +
</section>
 +
<section id="resistance">
 +
<h2>Resistance</h2>
-
<br/>
+
<br>
-
+
-
<h3>Chitinase</h3>
+
-
<p>TEXT TEXT TEXT TEXT TEXT TEXT TEXT TEXT TEXT TEXT TEXT TEXT TJASA TEXT TEXT TEXT TEXT TEXT TEXT TEXT TEXT TEXT</p>
+
-
</section>
+
-
<section id="conclusion">
+
<section id="approach2">
-
<h2>Conclusion</h2>
+
<h3>Approach</h3>
-
<h3>2,4-Diacetylphloroglucinol (2,4-DAPG)<h3>
+
</section>
-
<h3>Dimethyldisulfide(DMDS) and dimethyltrisulfide(DMTS)</h3>
+
<p>
-
<h3>Pyoverdine</h3>
+
Different gene cluster known to be related to fusaric acid resistance will be isolated from multiple different organisms. FusABCDE from <i>Burkholderia cepacia</i> [1], FDT-123 from <i>Klebsiella oxytoca</i> [2], FuaABC from <i>Stenotrophomonas maltophilia</i> [3] and PP1263-5 from <i>Pseudomonas putida</i> itself. These clusters will then be expressed under an IPTG inducible promoter (BBa_J04500) or a ramose inducible promoter (BBa_K914003) in order to test the resistance levels. Since all of the clusters contain multiple illegal PstI sites, it was decided to insert the cluster directly in the SpeI site of the biobrick suffix. <br>
-
<h3>chitinase</h3>
+
PP1263-5 from <i>P. putida</i> could be isolated from the wild type strain used at our own facilities. The original strains referred to in the research papers for the other three organisms were not available. Therefore homologues genes, with high levels of sequence identity (>98%) were identified and obtained from microbial collections.
 +
</p>
 +
<br/>
 +
<section id="results2">
 +
<h3>Results</h3>
</section>
</section>
 +
<p>
 +
All clusters but FuaABC were successfully isolated by PCR but cloning proved to be more difficult. Initial attempts to ligate the cluster behind BBa_J04500 in psb1C3 and transform it into E. Coli yielded no results. Although colony PCR showed a positive colony in some cases of the FDT cluster, plasmids isolated from these colonies were not of the right size to contain the inserts. Sequencing one of these plasmids with the VR and VF2 primers showed insertion of a small fragment containing the end and start of the primer used to PCR the cluster and a small palindromic sequence of 8bp. (ATCGATGCTA) <br/><br/>
 +
Membrane proteins can potentially be toxic when expressed at a too high rate. Therefore the construct was inserted in to a low copy number backbone (pSB3K3 / pSB4K5). Additionally the three genes of the smallest cluster (FDT-123) were separately expressed to see if one of them was the cause of the possible toxicity. <br/><br/>
 +
Successful transformants were obtained in pSB4K5 for the whole FDT cluster, FDT-2 and FDT-3 under a pLac promoter. Once again the whole FDT cluster showed up successful on colony PCR, but failed to show the expected results when a restriction digest was done on isolated plasmids. Sequencing showed again inclusion of both the primers and a small palindromic sequence (TAGCATCGAT/ATCGATGCTA). <br/><br/>
 +
Given that both FDT-2 and FDT-3 were successfully cloned but the whole cluster or FDT-1 separately did not yield any results,  FDT-1 , which has homologues proteins in all 3 clusters is the most likely cause for toxicity.
 +
</p>
-
<section id="future">
+
<section id="future2">
-
<h2>Future work</h2>
+
<h3>Future Work<h3>
-
<p>For future work, it would be nice if all the anti-fungal genes are coupled together behind the fusaric acid promoter in order to test production rate that is induced by fusaric acid. Also testing in the green house with a co-inoculation of <i>F.oxysporum</i> in order to see if production of the anti-fungals can reach high enough levels that it causes inhibition affect to<i> F.oxysporum</i>. This really depends on the amount of fusaric acid present in the soil when <i>F.oxysporum</i> is present. Other works would be to try other anti-fungal genes to increase inhibition by using other anti-fungal compounds such as phenazine-1-carboxylic acid which was shown to also have anti-fungal effects</p>
+
</section>
 +
<p>
 +
Expression of the complete cluster has not yet been achieved. More research is required to understand the function of the different parts of the resistance cluster. Ideally functionality could be proven using a FA sensitive knockout strain of <i>P. putida</i> itself with which could be restored by inserting the putative resistance cluster. After achieving successful expression, more insight could be achieved using protein interaction studies or GFP tagged proteins to determine localization.
 +
</p>
</section>
</section>
 +
<section id="biobricks">
 +
<h2>BioBricks</h2>
 +
 +
<p>
 +
<a class="soft_link" href="http://parts.igem.org/Part:BBa_K1493000">BBa_K1493000</a>, <a class="soft_link" href="http://parts.igem.org/Part:BBa_K1493002">BBa_K1493002</a>, <a class="soft_link" href="http://parts.igem.org/Part:BBa_K1493003">BBa_K1493003</a>
 +
</p>
 +
<br>
 +
<p style="float:right"><b>Continue to <a href="https://2014.igem.org/Team:Wageningen_UR/project/fungal_inhibition"  class="soft_link">Fungal Inhibition >></a> </b>
<section id="reference">
<section id="reference">
<h2>References</h2>
<h2>References</h2>
-
<ol class="references">    
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</section>
-
<li>Abbas, A., J. E. McGuire, D. Crowley, C. Baysse, M. Dow and F. O'Gara (2004). "The putative permease PhlE of Pseudomonas fluorescens F113 has a role in 2,4-diacetylphloroglucinol resistance and in general stress tolerance." Microbiology 150(Pt 7): 2443-2450.</li>
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<p>
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<li>Atkinson, R. A., A. L. M. Salah El Din, B. Kieffer, J.-F. Lefèvre and M. A. Abdallah (1998). "Bacterial Iron Transport: 1H NMR Determination of the Three-Dimensional Structure of the Gallium Complex of Pyoverdin G4R, the Peptidic Siderophore of Pseudomonas putida G4R†,‡." Biochemistry 37(45): 15965-15973.</li>
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</section>
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<li>Bakker, P. H. M., D. M. Glandorf, M. Viebahn, T. M. Ouwens, E. Smit, P. Leeflang, K. Wernars, L. Thomashow, J. Thomas-Oates and L. van Loon (2002). "Effects of Pseudomonas putida modified to produce phenazine-1-carboxylic acid and 2,4-diacetylphloroglucinol on the microflora of field grown wheat."  81(1-4): 617-624.</li>
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<li>Bangera, M. G. and L. S. Thomashow (1999). "Identification and characterization of a gene cluster for synthesis of the polyketide antibiotic 2,4-diacetylphloroglucinol from Pseudomonas fluorescens Q2-87." J Bacteriol 181(10): 3155-3163.</li>
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<ol class="references">
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<li>Belgrove, A. (2007). Biological Control of Fusarium Oxysporum F.sp. Cubense Using Non-pathogenic F. Oxysporum Endophytes, University of Pretoria.</li>
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<li>Utsumi, R., et al., Molecular cloning and characterization of the fusaric acid-resistance gene from Pseudomonas cepacia. Agricultural and biological chemistry, 1991. 55(7): p. 1913-8.</li>
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<li>Dos Santos, V. A. P. M., S. Heim, E. R. B. Moore, M. Strätz and K. N. Timmis (2004). "Insights into the genomic basis of niche specificity of Pseudomonas putida KT2440." Environmental Microbiology 6(12): 1264-1286.</li>
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<li>Toyoda, H., et al., DNA Sequence of Genes for Detoxification of Fusaric Acid, a Wilt-inducing Agent Produced by Fusarium Species. Journal of Phytopathology, 1991. 133(4): p. 265-277.</li>
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<li>Duijff, B., J. Meijer, P. H. M. Bakker and B. Schippers (1993). "Siderophore-mediated competition for iron and induced resistance in the suppression of fusarium wilt of carnation by fluorescent Pseudomonas spp."  99(5-6): 277-289.</li>
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<li>Hu, R.-M., et al., An Inducible Fusaric Acid Tripartite Efflux Pump Contributes to the Fusaric Acid Resistance in Stenotrophomonas maltophilia. PLoS ONE, 2012. 7(12): p. e51053.</li>
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<li>Duijff, B. J., P. A. H. M. Bakker and B. Schippers (1994). "Suppression of fusarium wilt of carnation by Pseudomonas putida WCS358 at different levels of disease incidence and iron availability." Biocontrol Science and Technology 4(3): 279-288.</li>
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<li>Nelson, K.E., et al., Complete genome sequence and comparative analysis of the metabolically versatile Pseudomonas putida KT2440. Environmental microbiology, 2002. 4(12): p. 799-808.</li>
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<li>Elad, Y. and R. Baker (1985). "The role of competition for iron and carbon in suppression of chlamydospore germination of Fusarium spp. by Pseudomonas spp." Phytopathology 75(9): 1053-1059.</li>
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<li>Maddocks, S.E. and P.C.F. Oyston, Structure and function of the LysR-type transcriptional regulator (LTTR) family proteins. Microbiology (Reading, England), 2008. 154(Pt 12): p. 3609-23.</li>
-
<li>Haas, D. and G. Defago (2005). "Biological control of soil-borne pathogens by fluorescent pseudomonads." Nat Rev Microbiol 3(4): 307-319.</li>
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<li>Hanniffy, S. B., M. Philo, C. Pelaez, M. J. Gasson, T. Requena and M. C. Martinez-Cuesta (2009). "Heterologous production of methionine-gamma-lyase from Brevibacterium linens in Lactococcus lactis and formation of volatile sulfur compounds." Appl Environ Microbiol 75(8): 2326-2332.</li>
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-
<li>Herrera-Estrella, A. and I. Chet (1999). "Chitinases in biological control." Exs 87: 171-184.</li>
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-
<li>Lemanceau, P., P. A. Bakker, W. J. De Kogel, C. Alabouvette and B. Schippers (1992). "Effect of pseudobactin 358 production by Pseudomonas putida WCS358 on suppression of fusarium wilt of carnations by nonpathogenic Fusarium oxysporum Fo47." Applied and Environmental Microbiology 58(9): 2978-2982.</li>
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<li>Loper, H. G. a. J. E. (2009). "Genomics of secondary metabolite production by Pseudomonas spp." from http://pubs.rsc.org/en/content/articlehtml/2009/np/b817075b#cit62.</li>
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<li>Matthijs, S., G. Laus, J. M. Meyer, K. Abbaspour-Tehrani, M. Schafer, H. Budzikiewicz and P. Cornelis (2009). "Siderophore-mediated iron acquisition in the entomopathogenic bacterium Pseudomonas entomophila L48 and its close relative Pseudomonas putida KT2440." Biometals 22(6): 951-964.</li>
+
-
<li>Mauch, F., B. Mauch-Mani and T. Boller (1988). "Antifungal Hydrolases in Pea Tissue: II. Inhibition of Fungal Growth by Combinations of Chitinase and β-1,3-Glucanase." Plant Physiology 88(3): 936-942.</li>
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-
<li>Meldau, D. G., S. Meldau, L. H. Hoang, S. Underberg, H. Wunsche and I. T. Baldwin (2013). "Dimethyl disulfide produced by the naturally associated bacterium bacillus sp B55 promotes Nicotiana attenuata growth by enhancing sulfur nutrition." Plant Cell 25(7): 2731-2747.</li>
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-
<li>Nagarajkumar, M., R. Bhaskaran and R. Velazhahan (2004). "Involvement of secondary metabolites and extracellular lytic enzymes produced by Pseudomonas fluorescens in inhibition of Rhizoctonia solani, the rice sheath blight pathogen." Microbiological Research 159(1): 73-81.</li>
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-
<li>Rezzonico, F., M. Zala, C. Keel, B. Duffy, Y. Moënne-Loccoz and G. Défago (2007). "Is the ability of biocontrol fluorescent pseudomonads to produce the antifungal metabolite 2,4-diacetylphloroglucinol really synonymous with higher plant protection?" New Phytologist 173(4): 861-872.</li>
+
-
<li>Silva-Rocha, R., E. Martínez-García, B. Calles, M. Chavarría, A. Arce-Rodríguez, A. de las Heras, A. D. Páez-Espino, G. Durante-Rodríguez, J. Kim and P. I. Nikel (2013). "The Standard European Vector Architecture (SEVA): a coherent platform for the analysis and deployment of complex </li>
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-
<li>Venturi, V., C. Ottevanger, M. Bracke and P. Weisbeek (1995). "Iron regulation of siderophore biosynthesis and transport in Pseudomonas putida WCS358: involvement of a transcriptional activator and of the Fur protein." Molecular Microbiology 15(6): 1081-1093.</li>
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-
<li>Venturi, V., P. Weisbeek and M. Koster (1995). "Gene regulation of siderophore-mediated iron acquisition in Pseudomonas: not only the Fur repressor." Mol Microbiol 17(4): 603-610.</li>
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<li>Zhang, H., A. Mallik and R. S. Zeng (2013). "Control of Panama disease of banana by rotating and intercropping with Chinese chive (Allium tuberosum Rottler): role of plant volatiles." J Chem Ecol 39(2): 243-252.</li>
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</ol>
</ol>
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</section>
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Latest revision as of 03:13, 18 October 2014

Wageningen UR iGEM 2014

Fungal Sensing


When we designed BananaGuard, we wanted it to be effective, safe and specific in fighting Fusarium oxysporum f. sp. cubense (foc). This part describes how our product is specific in only targeting this fungus and not affecting other soil fungi.

The pathogenic fungus F. oxysporum secretes fusaric acid, a toxin needed to invade the banana plant via the roots. Pseudomonas putida, which serves us as a platform for the development of our biological control agent. Here the engineered Pseudomonas putida needs to be able to sense fusaric acid and activate gene expression accordingly. Resistance to fusaric acid is also crucial in this process and we found that Pseudomonas putida already possesses a good base level of resistance [1]. To be able to transfer our system to different platforms, we aim to introduce fusaric acid resistance in Escherichia coli.


Fusaric Acid Sensing

Overview

Resistance to fusaric acid is found in several microorganisms, such as Stenotrophomonas maltophilia [3] and Pseudomonas putida [4]. This resistance to the toxic compound is due to a fusaric acid efflux pump, which pumps the acid out of the cell. After doing a literature search, we found out that there are a few proteins encoded in the genome of P. putida KT2440 which should confer fusaric acid resistance based on in silico prediction. The corresponding genes are all found placed in an operon cluster starting from pp1263 to pp1266 [4]. Upstream of this region and transcribed to the opposite direction we found the pp1262 gene whose predicted function is a LysR-type regulator.

Based on the above predictions and the gene topology, we hypothesized that since fusaric acid resistance from this cluster has not been confirmed through experiments it was worth to try to check if the theoretical regulator pp1262 can control the expression of the gene cluster through a promoter in the intergenic area. Based on this hypothesis, expression of the pp1262 protein should repress transcription of the operon cluster in the absence of fusaric acid. On the other side, when fusaric acid is present, repression should be relieved. To further support that this is how the system works and that fusaric acid does not activate the regulator leading to higher transcription rates of the resistance cluster, we expect that when the regulator is overexpressed in P. putida, it causes lower fusaric acid resistance because of lower depression rate of the promoter (Figure 1). Hence, we isolated pp1262 and the intergenic region and put it into a BioBrick, effectively acting together as a fusaric acid inducible promoter (FAiP).

Figure 1. Hypothetical fusaric acid efflux pump operon present in the genome of Pseudomonas putida KT2440. When fusaric acid enters the cell, the inhibition of the efflux pump is inhibited and the efflux pump is transcribed, resulting in the excretion of fusaric acid out of the cell. For the sensing part of this iGEM project, only the detection part is used.

We decided to test and characterize the fusaric acid sensitivity and expression of this part by using different levels of fusaric acid. The promoter was tested using GFP and RFP reporter genes (BBa_I13507, BBa_I13504, BBa_J23100) as output. Each BioBrick part contains our promoter, an RBS, a reporter gene and two terminators (Figure 2). The new constructs were expressed in P. putida to test for expression in the presence of fusaric acid.

Figure 2. The complete construct containing both our fusaric acid inducible promoter and a reporter gene.

Approach

To isolate the pp1262 gene and the downstream intergenic region, two promoters containing the RFC10 parts were used in a PCR reaction on the genomic DNA of P. putida KT2440. The product was ligated into pSB1C3 and transformed into chemically competent E. coli cells. The part was digested again and ligated upstream of several different reporter genes. BBa_I13507, which contains an RBS, mRFP and two terminators was successfully transformed. However, after sequencing it became clear that this BioBrick did not contain mRFP, making it unsuitable for this experiment. This problem has been reported to the registry. BBa_I13504 - which contains an RBS, GFP and two terminators - was used for further experiments. This reporter construct combined with our promoter part was ligated and transformed into E. coli. Sequencing confirmed the successful assembly. This construct should only show green fluorescence in the presence of fusaric acid, and no fluorescence when fusaric acid is absent.

The E. coli cells, containing the construct were grown on agar plates containing different concentrations of fusaric acid. At 140µM, there was no significant difference between the transformed cells and the control cells. At higher concentrations the cells died, due to their inability to pump the acid out of the cell. Since small amounts of fusaric acid are lethal to E. coli, this is not suitable as a host to test the expression.

The construct was transformed into a different backbone (pSB1K3) and inserted into electrocompetent P. putida cells. The transformed cells were again grown on plates containing different concentrations of fusaric acid. A slight difference in colour could be observed between the transformed cells and the wild-type cells, indicating that the promoter is only active when fusaric acid is present (see Figure 3).

Figure 3. Both plates contain 4 strains of transformed P. putida, containing the BBa_K1493003. The right plate contains 50µg/ml kanamycin and 50µg/ml fusaric acid, whereas the left plate only contains 50µg/ml kanamycin. A slightly increased fluorescence can be observed in the right plate, indicating the promoter is induced by the fusaric acid.


A growth experiment was performed in a 96-wells plate, containing 0, 55, 140, 285, 565 and 1415µM (0, 10, 25, 50, 100 and 250µg/ml) fusaric acid and both transformed and wild-type P. putida cells. After 18h, at a concentration of 285µM fusaric acid, the transformed cells showed more fluorescence than the wild-type cells, while both strains showed no fluorescence when no fusaric acid was added, indicating that the promoter is not active when no fusaric acid is present.

The wild-type P. putida cells showed some fluorescence as well. We hypothesized that the stress caused by fusaric acid caused the excretion of additional fluorescent compounds, such as pyoverdine. Also, we found that LB medium has some auto-fluorescence. Since GFP does not include an excretion tag, we solved this problem by removing the supernatant by washing the cells with PBS and measuring the clean cells afterwards.

After washing with PBS, the wild-type cells showed no significant fluorescence, whereas the transformed cells clearly did, (see Figure 4.) indicating that the promoter is functional in this experiment.

Figure 4. Both P. putida strains are grown in LB medium with 285µM fusaric acid and washed with PBS. GFP fluorescence was checked for 6 samples of each, at 395nm excitation and 501 nm emission. This experiment shows that the promoter is active in the presence of fusaric acid. However, the value of the fluorescence is a dimentionless unit relative to the wild-type, which means a characterized promoter with a downstream GFP gene should be added to the experiment as a positive control to characterize this fusaric acid induced promoter.


Futhermore, the WT cells showed growth on all concentrations of fusaric acid, whereas the transformed cells did not survive a fusaric acid concentration of 565µM and higher (see Figure 5), which supports our hypothesis that the inserted vector decreased the fusaric acid resistance of our transformed P. putida cells.

Figure 5. Fusaric Acid does not seem to influence the growth of the wild-type P. putida, whereas the transformed cells do not survive a concentration 565µM or higher.


A new growth experiment was set up, using M9 medium instead of LB medium, to prevent fluorescent background noise of the medium. In this experiment both the WT P. putida and P. putida containing BBa_K1493000 are grown in a 96-wells plate at 0, 85, 170, 255, 340 and 425µM (0, 15, 30, 45, 60 and 75µg/ml) fusaric acid. Furthermore, E. coli DH5α cells (WT and BBa BBa_K741002) were also grown in the same plate but without fusaric acid. The transformed E. coli has a well characterized promoter (pLac) with the same GFP gene downstream. (See Figure 6.) By comparing the fluorescence of our fusaric acid induced promoter at different fusaric acid concentrations to this constitutive promoter, characterization is performed. pLac is used as a constitutive promoter, which has shown activity without induction of IPTG.

Figure 6.
*Significantly different from WT with p<0.05
The measurement is based on GFP fluorescence in P. putida at increased concentrations of fusaric acid to prove and characterize the activity of the fusaric acid induced promoter, BBa_K1493000. For comparison, the well characterized pLac promoter (BBa_K741002, uninduced by IPTG) was used to quantify the activity of this promoter at different concentrations of fusaric acid. Our fusaric acid inducible promoter does not respond to low concentrations up to 170µM. From 255µM and up, the activity increases. The maximum measured activity of the promoter is 0.21 RPU at 425µM.

Discussion

Up to now, the regulation of this fusaric acid efflux pump was only theoretical. The literature [4,5] merely suggested a possibility in the regulation of the efflux pump yet no data is shown whatsoever but from these results the following conclusions can be drawn.
The hypothesis that the combination of the inhibiting LysR-type gene[5] and the promoter in the intergenic region is indeed fusaric acid inducible is supported by the results of the growth experiment in Figure 6. To activate the promoter, the concentration of fusaric acid has to pass a certain threshold.
To further support this hypothesis, it was observed that the transformed P. putida cells did not survive a fusaric acid concentration of 565µM or higher, likely because of over-expression of the inhibiting gene pp1262, which would not only inhibit the activity of the GFP but also of the original fusaric acid efflux pump in the original genome of P. putida, therefore decreasing the resistance of the host.
These experiments do not only give some good indications that the functioning of this promoter is indeed regulated by the induction of fusaric acid, but they also show that this regulator could actually be used for other purposes, such as in our case the detection of Fusarium oxysporum and producing anti-fungal agents in its presence. A fusaric acid detection system has not been developed before now, and the implications of this part could very likely exceed this iGEM project.

Future work

During this iGEM project, we also tried to isolate the promoter from the original P. putida KT2440 genome without the inhibiting gene, but we were unsuccessful to do so. However, while performing mutagenesis on the BioBrick to remove the illegal restriction site PstI, an unintentional insert was introduced, causing a frame shift in the inhibiting gene, possibly disabling its function, leaving the promoter uninhibited. When this part would be inserted into P. putida, the over-expression of the inhibiting gene would be gone. Note that using this part is only possible in P. putida for this reason.

By introducing this part to P. putida and growing it at the same time as the tested transformed P. putida used in the previous experiments, the fusaric acid resistance can be compared between the two strains. Hypothetically, the new strain could have a higher resistance, because the overexpression of the inhibiting gene is dysfunctional and therefore cannot block the fusaric acid efflux pump in the original genome. We did not have time to test this yet.

Resistance


Approach

Different gene cluster known to be related to fusaric acid resistance will be isolated from multiple different organisms. FusABCDE from Burkholderia cepacia [1], FDT-123 from Klebsiella oxytoca [2], FuaABC from Stenotrophomonas maltophilia [3] and PP1263-5 from Pseudomonas putida itself. These clusters will then be expressed under an IPTG inducible promoter (BBa_J04500) or a ramose inducible promoter (BBa_K914003) in order to test the resistance levels. Since all of the clusters contain multiple illegal PstI sites, it was decided to insert the cluster directly in the SpeI site of the biobrick suffix.
PP1263-5 from P. putida could be isolated from the wild type strain used at our own facilities. The original strains referred to in the research papers for the other three organisms were not available. Therefore homologues genes, with high levels of sequence identity (>98%) were identified and obtained from microbial collections.


Results

All clusters but FuaABC were successfully isolated by PCR but cloning proved to be more difficult. Initial attempts to ligate the cluster behind BBa_J04500 in psb1C3 and transform it into E. Coli yielded no results. Although colony PCR showed a positive colony in some cases of the FDT cluster, plasmids isolated from these colonies were not of the right size to contain the inserts. Sequencing one of these plasmids with the VR and VF2 primers showed insertion of a small fragment containing the end and start of the primer used to PCR the cluster and a small palindromic sequence of 8bp. (ATCGATGCTA)

Membrane proteins can potentially be toxic when expressed at a too high rate. Therefore the construct was inserted in to a low copy number backbone (pSB3K3 / pSB4K5). Additionally the three genes of the smallest cluster (FDT-123) were separately expressed to see if one of them was the cause of the possible toxicity.

Successful transformants were obtained in pSB4K5 for the whole FDT cluster, FDT-2 and FDT-3 under a pLac promoter. Once again the whole FDT cluster showed up successful on colony PCR, but failed to show the expected results when a restriction digest was done on isolated plasmids. Sequencing showed again inclusion of both the primers and a small palindromic sequence (TAGCATCGAT/ATCGATGCTA).

Given that both FDT-2 and FDT-3 were successfully cloned but the whole cluster or FDT-1 separately did not yield any results, FDT-1 , which has homologues proteins in all 3 clusters is the most likely cause for toxicity.

Future Work

Expression of the complete cluster has not yet been achieved. More research is required to understand the function of the different parts of the resistance cluster. Ideally functionality could be proven using a FA sensitive knockout strain of P. putida itself with which could be restored by inserting the putative resistance cluster. After achieving successful expression, more insight could be achieved using protein interaction studies or GFP tagged proteins to determine localization.

BioBricks

BBa_K1493000, BBa_K1493002, BBa_K1493003


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References

  1. Utsumi, R., et al., Molecular cloning and characterization of the fusaric acid-resistance gene from Pseudomonas cepacia. Agricultural and biological chemistry, 1991. 55(7): p. 1913-8.
  2. Toyoda, H., et al., DNA Sequence of Genes for Detoxification of Fusaric Acid, a Wilt-inducing Agent Produced by Fusarium Species. Journal of Phytopathology, 1991. 133(4): p. 265-277.
  3. Hu, R.-M., et al., An Inducible Fusaric Acid Tripartite Efflux Pump Contributes to the Fusaric Acid Resistance in Stenotrophomonas maltophilia. PLoS ONE, 2012. 7(12): p. e51053.
  4. Nelson, K.E., et al., Complete genome sequence and comparative analysis of the metabolically versatile Pseudomonas putida KT2440. Environmental microbiology, 2002. 4(12): p. 799-808.
  5. Maddocks, S.E. and P.C.F. Oyston, Structure and function of the LysR-type transcriptional regulator (LTTR) family proteins. Microbiology (Reading, England), 2008. 154(Pt 12): p. 3609-23.