Tuning Interdomain Conjugation Toward in situ Population Modification in Yeast.
Kevin R StindtMegan N McCleanPublished in: bioRxiv : the preprint server for biology (2023)
The ability to modify and control natural and engineered microbiomes is essential for biotechnology and biomedicine. Fungi are critical members of most microbiomes, yet technology for modifying the fungal members of a microbiome has lagged far behind that for bacteria. Interdomain conjugation (IDC) is a promising approach, as DNA transfer from bacterial cells to yeast enables in situ modification. While such genetic transfers have been known to naturally occur in a wide range of eukaryotes, and are thought to contribute to their evolution, IDC has been understudied as a technique to control fungal or fungal-bacterial consortia. One major obstacle to widespread use of IDC is its limited efficiency. In this work, we utilize interactions between genetically tractable Escherichia coli and Saccharomyces cerevisiae to control the incidence of IDC. We test the landscape of population interactions between the bacterial donors and yeast recipients to find that bacterial commensalism leads to maximized IDC, both in culture and in mixed colonies. We demonstrate the capacity of cell-to-cell binding via mannoproteins to assist both IDC incidence and bacterial commensalism in culture, and model how these tunable controls can predictably yield a range of IDC outcomes. Further, we demonstrate that these lessons can be utilized to lastingly alter a recipient yeast population, by both "rescuing" a poor-growing recipient population and collapsing a stable population via a novel IDC-mediated CRISPR/Cas9 system.
Keyphrases
- saccharomyces cerevisiae
- escherichia coli
- crispr cas
- single cell
- cell wall
- risk factors
- induced apoptosis
- stem cells
- genome editing
- type diabetes
- genome wide
- metabolic syndrome
- gene expression
- oxidative stress
- adipose tissue
- skeletal muscle
- klebsiella pneumoniae
- insulin resistance
- cell death
- endoplasmic reticulum stress
- biofilm formation
- candida albicans