4.8 Article

Engineered calprotectin-sensing probiotics for IBD surveillance in humans

Publisher

NATL ACAD SCIENCES
DOI: 10.1073/pnas.2221121120

Keywords

inflammatory bowel disease; synthetic biology; probiotics; microbiome

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Inflammatory bowel disease (IBD) is a group of autoimmune diseases with unpredictable flares and invasive surveillance methods. Engineered probiotics have the potential to detect IBD biomarkers and provide noninvasive disease activity monitoring.
Inflammatory bowel disease (IBD) is a spectrum of autoimmune diseases affecting the inflammation. Disease flares can be difficult to predict, and the current practice of IBD disease activity surveillance through endoscopy is invasive and requires medical expertise. Recent advancements in synthetic biology raise the possibility that symbiotic microbes can be engineered to selectively detect disease biomarkers used in current clinical practice. Here, we introduce an engineered probiotic capable of detecting the clinical gold standard IBD biomarker, calprotectin, with sensitivity and specificity in IBD patients. Specifically, we identified a bacterial promoter in the probiotic strain Escherichia coli Nissle 1917 (EcN) which exhibits a specific expression increase in the presence of calprotectin. Using murine models of colitis, we show that the reporter signal is activated in vivo during transit of the GI tract following oral delivery. Furthermore, our engineered probiotic can successfully discriminate human patients with active IBD from those in remission and without IBD using patient stool samples, where the intensity of reporter signal quantitatively tracks with clinical laboratory-measured levels of calprotectin. Our pilot study sets the stage for probiotics that can be engineered to detect fecal calprotectin for precise noninvasive disease activity monitoring in IBD patients.

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