Genome editing in ubiquitous freshwater Actinobacteria.

IF 3.9 2区 生物学 Q2 BIOTECHNOLOGY & APPLIED MICROBIOLOGY
Applied and Environmental Microbiology Pub Date : 2024-11-20 Epub Date: 2024-10-16 DOI:10.1128/aem.00865-24
Nachiketa Bairagi, Jessica L Keffer, Jordan C Heydt, Julia A Maresca
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Development of genome-editing tools in diverse microbial species is an important step both in understanding the roles of those microbes in different environments, and in engineering microbes for a variety of applications. Freshwater-specific clades of Actinobacteria are ubiquitous and abundant in surface freshwaters worldwide. Here, we show that Rhodoluna lacicola and Aurantimicrobium photophilum, which represent widespread clades of freshwater Actinobacteria, are naturally transformable. We also show that gene inactivation via double homologous recombination and replacement of the target gene with antibiotic selection markers can be used in both strains, making them convenient and broadly accessible model organisms for freshwater systems. We further show that in both strains, the predicted phytoene synthase is the only phytoene synthase, and its inactivation prevents the synthesis of all pigments. The tools developed here enable targeted modification of the genomes of some of the most abundant microbes in freshwater communities. These genome-editing tools will enable hypothesis testing about the genetics and (eco)physiology of freshwater Actinobacteria and broaden the available model systems for engineering freshwater microbial communities.

Importance: To advance bioproduction or bioremediation in large, unsupervised environmental systems such as ponds, wastewater lagoons, or groundwater systems, it will be necessary to develop diverse genetically amenable microbial model organisms. Although we already genetically modify a few key species, tools for engineering more microbial taxa, with different natural phenotypes, will enable us to genetically engineer multispecies consortia or even complex communities. Developing genetic tools for modifying freshwater bacteria is particularly important, as wastewater, production ponds or raceways, and contaminated surface water are all freshwater systems where microbial communities are already deployed to do work, and the outputs could potentially be enhanced by genetic modifications. Here, we demonstrate that common tools for genome editing can be used to inactivate specific genes in two representatives of a very widespread, environmentally relevant group of Actinobacteria. These Actinobacteria are found in almost all tested surface freshwater environments, where they co-occur with primary producers, and genome-editing tools in these species are thus a step on the way to engineering microbial consortia in freshwater environments.

无处不在的淡水放线菌的基因组编辑。
在不同的微生物物种中开发基因组编辑工具是了解这些微生物在不同环境中的作用以及将微生物工程用于各种应用的重要一步。放线菌的淡水特异性支系在全球地表淡水中无处不在,数量丰富。在这里,我们展示了代表淡水放线菌广泛支系的Rhodoluna lacicola和Aurantimicrobium photophilum是可自然转化的。我们还表明,通过双同源重组使基因失活,并用抗生素选择标记置换目标基因,可用于这两种菌株,从而使它们成为淡水系统中方便且可广泛利用的模式生物。我们进一步发现,在这两种菌株中,预测的植物烯合成酶是唯一的植物烯合成酶,它的失活会阻止所有色素的合成。本文开发的工具可以对淡水生物群落中最丰富的一些微生物的基因组进行有针对性的改造。这些基因组编辑工具将有助于对淡水放线菌的遗传学和(生态)生理学进行假设检验,并扩大淡水微生物群落工程的可用模型系统:为了在池塘、废水泻湖或地下水系统等大型、无监控的环境系统中推进生物生产或生物修复,有必要开发出多种基因适应性微生物模式生物。尽管我们已经对一些关键物种进行了基因改造,但对更多具有不同自然表型的微生物类群进行工程改造的工具将使我们能够对多物种联合体甚至复杂群落进行基因改造。开发改造淡水细菌的基因工具尤为重要,因为废水、生产池塘或赛道以及受污染的地表水都是淡水系统,在这些系统中已经部署了微生物群落进行工作,通过基因改造有可能提高产出。在这里,我们展示了基因组编辑的常用工具可用于灭活放线菌中两个非常广泛、与环境相关的代表菌群的特定基因。这些放线菌几乎存在于所有经过测试的地表淡水环境中,它们与初级生产者共生,因此这些物种的基因组编辑工具是淡水环境中微生物联合体工程化道路上的一步。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
Applied and Environmental Microbiology
Applied and Environmental Microbiology 生物-生物工程与应用微生物
CiteScore
7.70
自引率
2.30%
发文量
730
审稿时长
1.9 months
期刊介绍: Applied and Environmental Microbiology (AEM) publishes papers that make significant contributions to (a) applied microbiology, including biotechnology, protein engineering, bioremediation, and food microbiology, (b) microbial ecology, including environmental, organismic, and genomic microbiology, and (c) interdisciplinary microbiology, including invertebrate microbiology, plant microbiology, aquatic microbiology, and geomicrobiology.
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