Engineering Endosymbiotic Growth of E. coli in Mammalian Cells.
Christoph G GäbeleinMichael A ReiterChantal ErnstGabriel H GigerJulia A VorholtPublished in: ACS synthetic biology (2022)
Endosymbioses are cellular mergers in which one cell lives within another cell and have led to major evolutionary transitions, most prominently to eukaryogenesis. Generation of synthetic endosymbioses aims to provide a defined starting point for studying fundamental processes in emerging endosymbiotic systems and enable the engineering of cells with novel properties. Here, we tested the potential of different bacteria for artificial endosymbiosis in mammalian cells. To this end, we adopted the fluidic force microscopy technology to inject diverse bacteria directly into the cytosol of HeLa cells and examined the endosymbiont-host interactions by real-time fluorescence microscopy. Among them, Escherichia coli grew exponentially within the cytoplasm, however, at a faster pace than its host cell. To slow down the intracellular growth of E. coli , we introduced auxotrophies in E. coli and demonstrated that the intracellular growth rate can be reduced by limiting the uptake of aromatic amino acids. In consequence, the survival of the endosymbiont-host pair was prolonged. The presented experimental framework enables studying endosymbiotic candidate systems at high temporal resolution and at the single cell level. Our work represents a starting point for engineering a stable, vertically inherited endosymbiosis.
Keyphrases
- single cell
- escherichia coli
- single molecule
- induced apoptosis
- cell cycle arrest
- rna seq
- high throughput
- cell therapy
- high resolution
- amino acid
- pseudomonas aeruginosa
- gene expression
- mesenchymal stem cells
- climate change
- signaling pathway
- dna methylation
- genome wide
- risk assessment
- mass spectrometry
- bone marrow
- free survival