Construction of "lock-key" biological living material based on double engineered bacteria and its application on intestinal retention in vivo.
- Author:
Minghui ZHANG
1
;
Yingying ZHANG
2
;
Pengcheng ZHAO
1
;
Hanjie WANG
1
Author Information
- Publication Type:Journal Article
- Keywords: SpyTag-SpyCatcher; bi-bacteria; biological living materials; surface display
- MeSH: Animals; Mice; Bacteria; Microorganisms, Genetically-Modified; Escherichia coli/genetics*
- From: Chinese Journal of Biotechnology 2023;39(3):1163-1174
- CountryChina
- Language:Chinese
- Abstract: At present, the research of biological living materials mainly focuses on applications in vitro, such as using a single bacterial strain to produce biofilm and water plastics. However, due to the small volume of a single strain, it is easy to escape when used in vivo, resulting in poor retention. In order to solve this problem, this study used the surface display system (Neae) of Escherichia coli to display SpyTag and SpyCatcher on the surface of two strains, respectively, and constructed a double bacteria "lock-key" type biological living material production system. Through this force, the two strains are cross-linked in situ to form a grid-like aggregate, which can stay in the intestinal tract for a longer time. The in vitro experiment results showed that the two strains would deposit after mixing for several minutes. In addition, confocal imaging and microfluidic platform results further proved the adhesion effect of the dual bacteria system in the flow state. Finally, in order to verify the feasibility of the dual bacteria system in vivo, mice were orally administrated by bacteria A (p15A-Neae-SpyTag/sfGFP) and bacteria B (p15A-Neae-SpyCatcher/mCherry) for three consecutive days, and then intestinal tissues were collected for frozen section staining. The in vivo results showed that the two bacteria system could be more detained in the intestinal tract of mice compared with the non-combined strains, which laid a foundation for further application of biological living materials in vivo.