Difference between revisions of "Team:Nottingham/Lab"

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Our project aims to create a bacteriophage which will supress toxin production in <em>C. difficile</em> once integrated into its genome. To do this we will genetically modify a bacteriophage known to infect strains of <em>C. difficile</em> named phiSBRC. The bacteriophage will be modified to include constructs to supress toxin production either via a dead-Cas9 approach or via asRNA. There were several design considerations when approaching this problem. Firstly the construct should be capable of significantly supressing toxin production, it was not known whether dead-Cas9 or asRNA would be superior in this respect. Secondly, the eventual genetic construct we choose should be sufficiently small that we can alter the bacteriophage genome without affecting its normal function adversely. One potential limitation was thought to be the total amount of DNA which the bacteriophage could package into its head. In this respect asRNA could have a significant advantage over a dead-Cas9 approach since the total size of the genetic construct can be much smaller. Antisense RNA constructs can simply consist of a promoter and a short asRNA region of less than 100bp while the <em>cas9</em> gene alone is more than 4kb long. However, since it was not known which approach would produce more effective toxin suppression both approaches were pursued.  
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Our project aims to create a phage which will suppress toxin production in <em>C. difficile</em> once integrated into its genome. To do this we will genetically modify a phage known to infect strains of <em>C. difficile</em> named phiSBRC. The phage will be modified to include constructs to suppress toxin production either via a CRISPRi (dead-Cas9) approach or via asRNA. There were several design considerations when approaching this problem. Firstly the construct should be capable of significantly suppressing toxin production, it was not known whether dead-Cas9 or asRNA would be superior in this respect. Secondly, the eventual genetic construct we choose should be sufficiently small that we can alter the phage genome without adversely affecting its normal function. One potential limitation was thought to be the total amount of DNA which the phage could package into its head. In this respect asRNA could have a significant advantage over a dead-Cas9 approach since the total size of the genetic construct can be much smaller. Antisense RNA constructs can simply consist of a promoter and a short asRNA region of less than 100bp while the <em>cas9</em> gene alone is more than 4kb long. However, since it was not known which approach would produce more effective toxin suppression both approaches were pursued.  
 
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<em>C. difficile</em> has two well characterised toxins which cause epithelial cells to undergo apoptosis these are TcdA and TcdB. It was thought that each construct we create should aim to supress both of these toxins simultaneously since research has concluded that each can operate independently from the other (Kuehne et al., 2010). The general form of our constructs therefore is to have antisense RNA parts downstream of promoters with a transcriptional terminator between these promoter-asRNA pairs. It was thought to use two different promoters to as to avoid unwanted recombination events within our constructs. As discussed previously, the optimal promoter for expressing the asRNA parts was thought to be the strongest promoter possible. We were therefore looking for the two strongest promoters in <em>C. difficile</em> we could find. Our results from the promoter assays we performed indicate that PCsp_fdx¬ is the strongest promoter assayed in <em>C. difficile</em>. Unfortunately we were unable to clone the GusA reporter plasmid for PCac_thl which was the other clostridial promoter expected to give strong expression. However, the PCac_thl GFP reporter plasmid was created and assayed in <em>E. coli</em> where it gave the highest expression of any promoter tested including the positive control used in the iGEM interlab studies. This result was consistent in our laboratory as well as that of our two collaborating teams representing Imperial and Warwick Universities. Since P¬Cac_thl outperformed every other promoter in <em>E. coli</em>, is derived from a clostridial organism, and has been routinely used in overexpression studies in clostridial research it was thought likely that it would have given strong expression in the GusA assay in <em>C. difficile</em> had the plasmid been cloned. As such PCac_thl and PCsp_fdx were chosen as the two strong promoters from which to express our asRNA parts.
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<em>C. difficile</em> has two well characterised toxins which cause epithelial cells to undergo apoptosis these are TcdA and TcdB. It was thought that each construct we create should aim to supress both of these toxins simultaneously since research has concluded that each can operate independently from the other (Kuehne <em>et al</em>., 2010). The general form of our constructs therefore is to have asRNA parts downstream of promoters with a transcriptional terminator between these promoter-asRNA pairs. It was thought to use two different promoters to as to avoid unwanted recombination events within our constructs. As discussed previously, the optimal promoter for expressing the asRNA parts was thought to be the strongest promoter possible. We were therefore looking for the two strongest promoters in <em>C. difficile</em> we could find. Our results from the promoter assays we performed indicate that PCsp_fdx¬ is the strongest promoter assayed in <em>C. difficile</em>. Unfortunately we were unable to clone the GusA reporter plasmid for PCac_thl which was the other Clostridial promoter expected to give strong expression. However, the PCac_thl GFP reporter plasmid was created and assayed in <em>E. coli</em> where it gave the highest expression of any promoter tested including the positive control used in the iGEM InterLab studies. This result was consistent in our laboratory as well as that of our two collaborating teams representing Imperial College London and University of Warwick. The Clostridial promoter P¬Cac_thl has been routinely used in Clostridial research and outperforms every other promoter in <em>E. coli</em>, therefore it can be hypothesised that P¬Cac_thl would exhibit the strongest levels of expression in the GusA promoter assay in <em>C. difficile</em>, had this plasmid been constructed. As such PCac_thl and PCsp_fdx were chosen as the two strong promoters from which to express our asRNA parts.
 
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When choosing the length of the antisense RNA we consulted the scientific literature. There is some contradicting advice on this topic with <em>E. coli</em> asRNA parts seeming to be significantly shorter than those used in the few asRNA studies we found performed in clostridia. There are important design considerations here since there is a compromise to be made. Longer asRNA parts seem to generally give a greater degree of suppression but are also more likely to give unwanted off-target effects. This is probably because they can bind the target mRNA more tightly but are also more likely to have regions of short similarity with other non-target mRNAs within the cell. With this in mind we chose to try two different lengths of asRNA binding to the coding region of the target gene as well as the entire region upstream of the gene expected to include the ribosome binding site. ‘Construct One’ has a coding region binding region of 24bp, this is the length suggested by a recent review paper on this topic (Hoynes-O’Connor &amp; Moon, 2016). ‘Construct Two’ has a coding region binding region of 50bp, this is much longer though still significantly shorter than the hundreds of base pairs previously used in clostridial studies (Desai &amp; Papoutsakis, 1999; Fagan &amp; Fairweather, 2011). Both of these constructs target both of the toxin genes we are interested in.  
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When choosing the length of the antisense RNA we consulted the scientific literature. There is some contradicting advice on this topic with <em>E. coli</em> asRNA parts seeming to be significantly shorter than those used in the few asRNA studies we found performed in clostridia. There are important design considerations here since there is a compromise to be made. Longer asRNA parts seem to generally give a greater degree of suppression but are also more likely to give unwanted off-target effects. This is probably because they can bind the target mRNA more tightly but are also more likely to have regions of short similarity with other non-target mRNAs within the cell. With this in mind we chose to try two different lengths of asRNA binding to the coding region of the target gene as well as the entire region upstream of the gene expected to include the ribosome binding site. ‘Construct One’ has a binding region of 24bp, this is the length suggested by a recent review paper on this topic (Hoynes-O’Connor &amp; Moon, 2016). ‘Construct Two’ has a binding region of 50bp, this is much longer though still significantly shorter than the hundreds of base pairs previously used in clostridial studies (Desai &amp; Papoutsakis, 1999; Fagan &amp; Fairweather, 2011). Both of these constructs target both of the toxin genes we are interested in.  
 
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Revision as of 16:27, 17 October 2018

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