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CRISPR-interference-based modulation of mobile genetic elements in bacteria
Author(s) -
Ákos Nyerges,
Balázs Bálint,
Judit Cseklye,
István Nagy,
Csaba Pál,
Tamás Fehér
Publication year - 2019
Publication title -
synthetic biology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.769
H-Index - 8
ISSN - 2397-7000
DOI - 10.1093/synbio/ysz008
Subject(s) - crispr , cas9 , biology , plasmid , gene silencing , crispr interference , transposition (logic) , synthetic biology , gene knockdown , rna interference , genome editing , transgene , genetics , genome engineering , euchromatin , mobile genetic elements , computational biology , escherichia coli , gene , chromosome , rna , heterochromatin , computer science , artificial intelligence
Spontaneous mutagenesis of synthetic genetic constructs by mobile genetic elements frequently results in the rapid loss of engineered functions. Previous efforts to minimize such mutations required the exceedingly time-consuming manipulation of bacterial chromosomes and the complete removal of insertional sequences (ISes). To this aim, we developed a single plasmid-based system (pCRIS) that applies CRISPR-interference to inhibit the transposition of bacterial ISes. pCRIS expresses multiple guide RNAs to direct inactivated Cas9 (dCas9) to simultaneously silence IS, IS, IS and IS at up to 38 chromosomal loci in , . As a result, the transposition rate of all four targeted ISes dropped to negligible levels at both chromosomal and episomal targets. Most notably, pCRIS, while requiring only a single plasmid delivery performed within a single day, provided a reduction of IS-mobility comparable to that seen in genome-scale chromosome engineering projects. The fitness cost of multiple IS-knockdown, detectable in flask-and-shaker systems was readily outweighed by the less frequent inactivation of the transgene, as observed in green fluorescent protein (GFP)-overexpression experiments. In addition, global transcriptomics analysis revealed only minute alterations in the expression of untargeted genes. Finally, the transposition-silencing effect of pCRIS was easily transferable across multiple strains. The plasticity and robustness of our IS-silencing system make it a promising tool to stabilize bacterial genomes for synthetic biology and industrial biotechnology applications.

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