Award details

Exploitation of new bacteriophages for generic strain engineering methods and functional genomic analysis of diverse bacteria

ReferenceBB/G000298/1
Principal Investigator / Supervisor Professor George Salmond
Co-Investigators /
Co-Supervisors
Institution University of Cambridge
DepartmentBiochemistry
Funding typeResearch
Value (£) 100,806
StatusCompleted
TypeResearch Grant
Start date 15/11/2008
End date 14/02/2010
Duration15 months

Abstract

The explosion in bacterial genomic information in the past 10 years has been very impressive, enabled by major investment by the primary research funders. In the past few years new technical advances in high throughput, high volume DNA sequencing methods and ever increasing bioinformatic predictive capability have accelerated capacity in general genomics. With the newest generation of DNA sequencing platforms the ability to generate genomic sequences will continue to increase exponentially. Now it is possible to determine the complete genome of a 'new' bacterium in a day, although the accurate predictive annotation of new genomes takes significantly longer and generally requires informed human input. Despite the explosion in bacterial genomic information and the associated predictions that flow from annotated genomes, there is still a paucity of functional genomic tools with which to test the bioinformatic predictions in the vast majority of bacteria for which there is a completed genome sequence. This project will attempt to develop phage-based technologies that will expand and/or initiate simple technical routes towards robust functional genomic analysis methods in bacteria for which there is currently no efficient mutagenesis or genetic complementation methods. The approaches taken will be a combination of 'classical' isolation of bespoke generalised transducing phages (GTPs) for specific bacterial hosts coupled with the engineering and development of tools derived from a new temperate phage (phiNP) with a chromosomal integration locus that is extremely widespread throughout bacteria. This dual strategy approach should provide a selection of genetic tools for the bacteriology community that will enable a broader functional genomics capability than currently exists. By concentrating initially on strains with fully sequenced genomes, we expect to gain the 'biggest bang for the buck' from the phage-based techniques developed in this short project.

Summary

Until the advent of rapid gene cloning and high throughput DNA sequencing methods, there was only very limited knowledge on the genetics, biochemistry and physiology of most bacteria. Prior to the development of such technologies, the most sophisticated studies on bacteria were done with E. coli K12 strains for which there was tremendous background information based on the ability to do inventive genetic analysis and strain constructions by a combination of in vivo and in vitro genetic manipulation. In recent years the ability to determine genome sequences has advanced at an incredible pace and so it is now possible to determine the complete DNA sequence of a new bacterium within a day (although gene annotation takes considerably longer). Additional technical advances in the methodologies for studying gene expression (e.g. by Q-RT-PCR analysis) have enhanced significantly the ability to investigate regulation of expression of specific genes in bacteria for which there are no, or minimal, genetic analysis methods available. However, a bottleneck in the full and meaningful exploitation of total genomic sequence information in 'new' bacteria is often the ability to make defined, specific mutants and to genetically complement such mutants for physiologically rigorous studies in transcriptomics, proteomics and metabolomics. To achieve this the researcher usually has to try to transfer existing genetic and molecular biology methods for mutagenesis and complementation (usually plasmid-based) from well-studied bacteria - with extremely variable outcomes. In the absence of rigorously defined mutants and clean complementation strategies, the veracity of comparative 'omic studies is questionable, at best, and non-existent at worst. Consequently it would be very useful to have facile and robust methods for transferring defined mutant genes between strains and for strain engineering in bacteria for which the full genomic sequences are known, but for which there is little other information - except bioinformatic prediction. In this project we will isolate and develop some bacterial viruses - generalised transducing phages (GTPs) - for a range of bacterial hosts which have been genomically sequenced, but for which there is little in the way of genetic engineering methodology currently available. These GTPs will be useful for bacterial strain constructions that are required for robust comparisons of wild type and mutant strains in functional genomics research programmes. In addition, we will start the engineering of a new bacteriophage (phiNP) that we discovered in a bacterial mouse pathogen. This phage is temperate and integrates its genome into the bacterial chromosome in single copy at a precise location towards the end of a bacterial gene involved in the efficient control of protein synthesis and ribosome recycling (tmRNA or ssrA). When the phage genome integrates into the bacterial gene sequence it creates a target sequence duplication such that the tmRNA target gene is functionally reconstituted and thus there is no obvious defect in the bacterial host as a consequence of acquiring the virus DNA. The bacterial tmRNA gene is very widely distributed in bacteria and is even found in plastid genomes of higher cells. Consequently, this bacterial virus could be manipulated to make derivatives that will provide tools for transferring mutant and normal genes, mutagenic transposons and other genetic elements into the chromosomes of bacterial hosts containing the conserved target sequence. Therefore, by gene engineering methods, we intend to derive phiNP-based tools with a broad host range applicability in mutagenesis, cloning and complementation analysis. The combination of GTPs and phiNP-derived technologies will broaden the number of bacterial hosts for which powerful functional genomics can be performed and this should enfranchise more researchers for diverse - and rigorously controlled - 'omic studies.
Committee Closed Committee - Plant & Microbial Sciences (PMS)
Research TopicsMicrobiology, Technology and Methods Development
Research PriorityX – Research Priority information not available
Research Initiative Tools and Resources Development Fund (TRDF) [2006-2015]
Funding SchemeX – not Funded via a specific Funding Scheme
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