Team:Hamilton McMaster/Background
Background
Numerous methods for bacterial lysis exist, spanning a wide range of mechanisms such as chemically induced lysis methods (eg. detergents, cell lysis solutions), biologically induced methods (eg. lysozyme) and mechanically induced lysis methods (French press, sonication)1. While these techniques are valuable and still widely used, some can have inherent weaknesses such as the possibility of denaturing proteins of interest. Many of these techniques also require an operator to be present or would likely require expensive machinery for automation. In nature, viruses have also evolved bacterial cell lysis methods as an integral part of their replication cycles. One of the common methods utilized by viruses is a holin/endolysin system in order to achieve bacterial cell lysis upon completion of viral reproduction within the bacterial cell. This system relies on two major components: an endolysin such as T4 phage endolysin that has muralytic activity and degrades the bacterial peptidoglycan layer, and a holin/antiholin pair that operate to form holes in the bacterial inner membrane upon an environmental cue. The pore formation results in membrane depolarization and the export of endolysin where it can then access the peptidoglycan and degrade it, thereby removing a main source of structural integrity for the cell. Apart from the various membranes and cell wall, this method of lysis leaves most internal structures such as cytosolic proteins intact. This system is therefore open to adaptation by synthetic biologists to create non-denaturing lysis systems that can be controlled through genetic cues.
Construction and control of gene systems that can be manipulated via external stimuli have been heavily studied and utilized by synthetic biologists. One such example was demonstrated by Tabor et al. in 20142 and involved the use of naturally-occurring phytochromes and their associated chromophores to create gene systems that can be controlled by multichromatic light. Phytochromes are proteins that contain an N-terminal region that functions as a photoreceptor using a chromophore molecule as a cofactor, as well as a C-terminal region that functions as a histidine kinase. Activation of the photoreceptor portion by light catalyzes a conformational change in the protein that leads to autophosphorylation by the histidine kinase region. The autophosphorylated phytochrome can then activate a response regulator protein that will activate the expression of genes downstream of their respective DNA binding sites. The phytochromes allow for transcriptional modulation based upon light states outside of the cell, which can be controlled quickly and with ease. Multiple types of phytochromes have been discovered and characterized to date, including those that are able to sense green/red light as well as red/far red light.