DNA Repair-Responsive Engineered Whole Cell Microbial Sensors for Sensitive and High-Throughput Screening of Genotoxic Impurities.
Jie LiHaotian DingYuning ZhaoMingbin LinLinqi SongWei WangHaijuan DongXiao MaWenyuan LiuLingfei HanFeng ZhengPublished in: Analytical chemistry (2023)
Genotoxic impurities (GTIs) occurred in drugs, and food and environment pose a threat to human health. Accurate and sensitive evaluation of GTIs is of significance. Ames assay is the existing gold standard method. However, the pathogenic bacteria model lacks metabolic enzymes and requires mass GTIs, leading to insufficient safety, accuracy, and sensitivity. Whole-cell microbial sensors (WCMSs) can use normal strains to simulate the metabolic environment, achieving safe, sensitive, and high-throughput detection and evaluation for GTIs. Here, based on whether GTIs causing DNA alkylation required metabolic enzymes or not, two DNA repair-responsive engineered WCMS systems were constructed including Escherichia coli -WCMS and yeast-WCMS. A DNA repair-responsive promoter as a sensing element was coupled with an enhanced green fluorescent protein as a reporter to construct plasmids for introduction into WCMS. The ada promoter was screened out in the E. coli -WCMS, while the MAG1 promoter was selected for the yeast-WCMS. Different E. coli and yeast strains were modified by gene knockout and mutation to eliminate the interference and enhance the GTI retention in cells and further improved the sensitivity. Finally, GTI consumption of WCMS for the evaluation of methyl methanesulfonate (MMS) and nitrosamines was decreased to 0.46-8.53 μg and 0.068 ng-2.65 μg, respectively, decreasing 2-3 orders of magnitude compared to traditional methods. This study provided a novel approach to measure GTIs with different DNA damage pathways at a molecular level and facilitated the high-throughput screening and sensitive evaluation of GTIs.
Keyphrases
- dna repair
- escherichia coli
- dna damage
- human health
- high throughput
- single cell
- dna methylation
- dna damage response
- risk assessment
- transcription factor
- cancer therapy
- gene expression
- oxidative stress
- induced apoptosis
- klebsiella pneumoniae
- cell therapy
- saccharomyces cerevisiae
- microbial community
- biofilm formation
- climate change
- circulating tumor
- high resolution
- cell free
- crispr cas
- cell cycle arrest
- mesenchymal stem cells
- cell wall
- cystic fibrosis
- amino acid
- living cells
- drug delivery
- drug induced
- copy number
- mass spectrometry
- quantum dots
- loop mediated isothermal amplification