Engineering the Soil Bacterium Pseudomonas synxantha 2–79 into a Ratiometric Bioreporter for Phosphorus Limitation
Abstract
Microbial bioreporters hold promise for addressing challenges in medical and environmental applications. However, the difficulty in ensuring their stable persistence and function within the target environment remains a challenge. One strategy is to integrate information about the host strain and target environment into the design-build-test cycle of the bioreporter itself. Here, we present a case study for such an environmentally motivated design process by engineering the wheat commensal bacterium Pseudomonas synxantha 2–79 into a ratiometric bioreporter for phosphorus limitation. Comparative analysis showed that an exogenous P-responsive promoter outperformed its native counterparts. This reporter can selectively sense and report phosphorus limitation at plant-relevant concentrations of 25–100 μM without cross-activation from carbon or nitrogen limitation or high cell densities. Its performance is robust over a field-relevant pH range (5.8–8), and it responds only to inorganic phosphorus, even in the presence of common soil organic P. Finally, we used fluorescein-calibrated flow cytometry to assess whether the reporter’s performance in shaken liquid culture predicts its performance in soil, finding that although the reporter is still functional at the bulk level, its variability in performance increases when grown in a soil slurry as compared to planktonic culture, with a fraction of the population not expressing the reporter proteins. Together, our environmentally aware design process provides an example of how laboratory bioengineering efforts can generate microbes with a greater promise to function reliably in their applied contexts.
Copyright and License
Acknowledgement
This work was supported by the National Science Foundation Division of Molecular and Cellular Biosciences (MCB-2016137 to F.H.A). D.J.W. acknowledges support from the National Science Foundation Graduate Research Fellowship (DGE-1745301). R.M. acknowledges support from the Swiss National Science Foundation (SNSF) Early Mobility Postdoctoral Fellowship (P2ELP2_195118). K.M.S. acknowledges support from NIH Ruth L. Kirschstein National Research Service Award (1F32GM145123-01A1). We thank Dr. Michael K. Takase and Lawrence M. Henling for assistance with X-ray crystallographic data collection and Dr. Scott C. Virgil for the maintenance of the Caltech Center for Catalysis and Chemical Synthesis (3CS). We thank Dr. Mona Shahgoli for mass spectrometry assistance and Dr. David VanderVelde for the maintenance of the Caltech NMR facility. We also thank Dr. Sabine Brinkmann-Chen for the helpful discussions and comments on the manuscript. The paper is adapted from a thesis, which is available free of charge via the Internet at https://resolver.caltech.edu/CaltechTHESIS:09022023-064950039.
Contributions
D.J.W. and R.M. contributed equally.
Data Availability
The Supporting Information is available free of charge at https://pubs.acs.org/doi/10.1021/jacs.3c11722.
Conflict of Interest
The authors declare no competing financial interest.
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Additional details
- ISSN
- 2161-5063
- United States Army Research Office
- W911NF-19-D-0001
- Resnick Sustainability Institute, Caltech
- Caltech groups
- Division of Biology and Biological Engineering, Division of Geological and Planetary Sciences, Resnick Sustainability Institute