Attenuation of a Pathogenic Mycoplasma Strain by Modification of the obg Gene by Using Synthetic Biology Approaches.
LABROUSSAA, Fabien
Biologie du fruit et pathologie [BFP]
Universität Bern = University of Bern = Université de Berne [UNIBE]
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Biologie du fruit et pathologie [BFP]
Universität Bern = University of Bern = Université de Berne [UNIBE]
LABROUSSAA, Fabien
Biologie du fruit et pathologie [BFP]
Universität Bern = University of Bern = Université de Berne [UNIBE]
Biologie du fruit et pathologie [BFP]
Universität Bern = University of Bern = Université de Berne [UNIBE]
JORES, Joerg
Universität Bern = University of Bern = Université de Berne [UNIBE]
International Livestock Research Institute [CGIAR, Nairobi] [ILRI]
< Réduire
Universität Bern = University of Bern = Université de Berne [UNIBE]
International Livestock Research Institute [CGIAR, Nairobi] [ILRI]
Langue
en
Article de revue
Ce document a été publié dans
MSphere. 2019, vol. 4, n° 3, p. e00030-19
American Society for Microbiology.
Résumé en anglais
Mycoplasma species are responsible for several economically significant livestock diseases for which there is a need for new and improved vaccines. Most of the existing mycoplasma vaccines are attenuated strains that have ...Lire la suite >
Mycoplasma species are responsible for several economically significant livestock diseases for which there is a need for new and improved vaccines. Most of the existing mycoplasma vaccines are attenuated strains that have been empirically obtained by serial passages or by chemical mutagenesis. The recent development of synthetic biology approaches has opened the way for the engineering of live mycoplasma vaccines. Using these tools, the essential GTPase-encoding gene obg was modified directly on the Mycoplasma mycoides subsp. capri genome cloned in yeast, reproducing mutations suspected to induce a temperature-sensitive (TS+) phenotype. After transplantation of modified genomes into a recipient cell, the phenotype of the resulting M. mycoides subsp. capri mutants was characterized. Single-point obg mutations did not result in a strong TS+ phenotype in M. mycoides subsp. capri, but a clone presenting three obg mutations was shown to grow with difficulty at temperatures of ≥40°C. This particular mutant was then tested in a caprine septicemia model of M. mycoides subsp. capri infection. Five out of eight goats infected with the parental strain had to be euthanized, in contrast to one out of eight goats infected with the obg mutant, demonstrating an attenuation of virulence in the mutant. Moreover, the strain isolated from the euthanized animal in the group infected with the obg mutant was shown to carry a reversion in the obg gene associated with the loss of the TS+ phenotype. This study demonstrates the feasibility of building attenuated strains of mycoplasma that could contribute to the design of novel vaccines with improved safety.< Réduire
Mots clés
Saccharomyces cerevisiae
genome transplantation
vaccines
Mots clés en anglais
GTPase Obg
Mycoplasma
attenuated strain
genome engineering
temperature sensitivity
Project ANR
Nouvelles étapes de la Biologie Synthétique: vers la généralisation des méthodes de transplantation de génome - ANR-13-JSV5-0004
Origine
Importé de halUnités de recherche