4.7 Article

Engineering Tropism of Pseudomonas putida toward Target Surfaces through Ectopic Display of Recombinant Nanobodies

Journal

ACS SYNTHETIC BIOLOGY
Volume 10, Issue 8, Pages 2049-2059

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acssynbio.1c00227

Keywords

surface display; intimin; nanobody; Pseudomonas putida; quartz crystal microbalance; surface attachment

Funding

  1. SETH Project of Spanish Ministry of Science and Innovation [RTI2018-095584-BC42]
  2. SyCoLiM Project of Spanish Ministry of Science and Innovation [ERA-COBIOTECH 2018 - PCI2019-111859-2]
  3. MADONNA of the European Union [H2020FET-OPEN-RIA-2017-1-766975]
  4. BioRoboost of the European Union [H2020NMBP-BIO-CSA-2018-820699]
  5. SynBio4Flav of the European Union [H2020NMBP-TR-IND/H2020-NMBP-BIO-2018-814650]
  6. MIX-UP of the European Union [H2020-BIO-CN-2019-870294]
  7. InGEMICS-CM) Project of the Comunidad de Madrid -European Structural and Investment Funds -(FSE, FECER) [S2017/BMD-3691]
  8. Spanish Ministry of Science and Innovation [CTQ2017-84309-C2-1-R, RED2018-102412-T]
  9. Comunidad de Madrid (TRANSNANOAVANSENS Program) [P2018/NMT4349]

Ask authors/readers for more resources

Gram-negative bacteria have complex outer membrane structures that make designing reliable bacterial coatings challenging. In this study, ectopic expression of a fibrinogen-specific nanobody on Pseudomonas putida cells enabled the formation of a bacterial monolayer strongly bound to an antigen-coated support. This approach has potential for engineering specific bacterial coverings on target surfaces.
Gram-negative bacteria are endowed with complex outer membrane (OM) structures that allow them to both interact with other organisms and attach to different physical structures. However, the design of reliable bacterial coatings of solid surfaces is still a considerable challenge. In this work, we report that ectopic expression of a fibrinogen-specific nanobody on the envelope of Pseudomonas putida cells enables controllable formation of a bacterial monolayer strongly bound to an antigen-coated support. To this end, either the wild type or a surface-naked derivative of P. putida was engineered to express a hybrid between the beta-barrel of an intimin-type autotransporter inserted in the outer membrane and a nanobody (V-HH) moiety that targets fibrinogen as its cognate interaction partner. The functionality of the thereby presented V-HH and the strength of the resulting cell attachment to a solid surface covered with the cognate antigen were tested and parametrized with Quartz Crystal Microbalance technology. The results not only demonstrated the value of using bacteria with reduced OM complexity for efficient display of artificial adhesins, but also the potential of this approach to engineer specific bacterial coverings of predetermined target surfaces.

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