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Escola de Engenharia Pedro Miguel Azevedo Veloso Improving derived Listeria phage endolysins properties at low temperatures Outubro 2014 Escola de Engenharia Pedro Miguel Azevedo Veloso Improving derived Listeria phage endolysins properties at low temperatures Tese de Mestrado Mestrado em Bioengenharia Trabalho realizado sob a orientação de Doutor Leon D. Kluskens Outubro 2014 É autorizada a reprodução parcial desta tese apenas para efeitos de investigação, mediante declaração escrita do interessado, que a tal se compromete, Universidade do Minho, __ /__ /____ Assinatura:_________________________________________________ Aknowledgements Agradecimentos Agradecimentos A vida é uma longa caminhada e, apesar de este ser apenas mais um capítulo que agora se encerra, dela fazem parte várias pessoas. Pessoas essas que de forma direta ou indireta me ajudaram a conseguir alcançar objetivos, metas. É a essas pessoas que expresso, de seguida, os meus sinceros agradecimentos por me terem apoiado ao longo deste projeto. Em primeiro lugar quero agradecer ao meu orientador, Doutor Leon Kluskens, por me ter dado a oportunidade de estar presente num projeto científico ambicioso, por todo o conhecimento e conselhos transmitidos, por ter permitido aumentar o meu gosto pela área da biologia molecular assim como pela disponibilidade que sempre demonstrou ao longo de todo este projeto. Agradecer à Graça, que desde o primeiro dia me ajudou de forma incansável, demonstrando sempre enorme disponibilidade, espírito de entreajuda, apoio e compreensão mesmo nos momentos mais difíceis. Obrigado pelo conhecimento e experiência transmitidos. Agradecer ao Hugo, que apesar de ter entrado um pouco mais tarde no projeto, me ajudou com todo o seu conhecimento, pragmatismo e criatividade ajudando a contornar obstáculos que, por diversas vezes, se colocaram no caminho. Aos meus colegas de laboratório: Luís, pelos conselhos prestados, boas conversas e momentos de bom humor; à Catarina pela sua grande simpatia; ao José pelas boas conversas tecnológicas que tivemos. À Marta e Patrícia, colegas de mestrado, pela sua prontidão e disponibilidade em ajudar. Aos meus amigos de sempre, Pedro, Rui, João e Maria João pelo apoio prestado e pela boa disposição em todos os momentos. À Ana, meu ombro amigo, meu porto de abrigo, minha conselheira. Obrigado teu apoio incondicional e preciosos conselhos transmitidos durante este capítulo da minha vida. E por fim, o mais importante, à minha família, mãe, pai, irmã e avós. Obrigado por todo o esforço que fizeram para que conseguisse alcançar os meus objetivos pessoais e académicos. Obrigado por todo o apoio nos bons e maus momentos. Obrigado por me terem incutido desde sempre bons valores humanos. Espero um dia conseguir retribuir-vos tudo aquilo que me deram. Ser-vos-ei eternamente grato! x Abstract Resumo Abstract Listeria monocytogenes is a Gram-positive opportunistic pathogen that can grow in a wide variety of conditions and is responsible for listeriosis, a potential fatal disease, associated to the ingestion of contaminated food. The concerns about the upsurge of widespread reported cases, combined with emerging antibiotic-resistance amongst pathogenic bacteria, such as L. monocytogenes, demand for the development of novel preservation techniques that ensure the safety of food products. Endolysins, which originate from virulent bacteriophages, are responsible for the hydrolysis of the covalent bonds in peptidoglycan layer of the host cell. These enzyme properties represents a good alternatively approach against Gram-positive foodborne pathogens without altering the organoleptic properties of food products. However, in most of the cases, the activity and stability of naturally occurring enzymes is significantly lower than the biotechnological industry needs. Besides, there is a lack of research advances in lytic activity improvements of endolysins in food storage conditions. The experimental work developed in the scope of this thesis aimed at directing endolysin activity towards refrigeration temperatures against L. monocytogenes through the use of directed evolution strategies – error-prone PCR and cryodrilling. Different attempts were done for the isolation of listerial phages from livestock industries effluents and consequently identification and improvement of lytic activity of its derived endolysins. An in silico analysis of two different lysins – Ply500 and Ply511 – were performed to provide contextualization about their structure and domains. Although both proteins possess modular structure, Ply511 has a central catalytic domain and a not well characterized binding domain which contrasts to Ply500 domain organization. Protein expression in large and micro-scales of wild-type proteins was successfully done and confirmed by performing antibacterial tests against L. monocytogenes 5725. To enhance the activity of endolysins against L. monocytogenes cells, modified endolysins were constructed by amplifying their sequences using error-prone PCR technique and cloning into pQE-30 vector. The cloned vectors were transformed in E. coli JM109 competent cells, however no colonies were obtained. At the same time, using PlyP100 endolysin, a second approach based on the biotic interaction between phage-host at successively temperature was done to promote phage adaptation and consequently enzymatic evolution. xiv Resumo Listeria monocytogenes é um agente patogénico oportunista Gram-positivo, responsável por provocar listeriose, doença potencialmente mortal associada ao consumo de alimentos contaminados. A preocupação inerente à sua capacidade de sobreviver numa grande variedade de condições, o crescente número de surtos da doença e o aumento da resistência a antibióticos obrigam a que novas estratégias de conservação e preservação dos alimentos sejam desenvolvidas. Endolisinas derivadas de fagos são enzimas responsáveis pela lise das células do hospedeiro. Uma vez que não alteram as propriedades organoléticas dos alimentos, o uso destas enzimas representa uma boa alternativa na eliminação de agentes patogénicos Gram-positivos. Contudo, a baixa atividade e estabilidade das enzimas no seu estado natural torna-se incompatível com as necessidades industriais. Este trabalho experimental visou o melhoramento das propriedades líticas das endolisinas a temperaturas de refrigeração recorrendo a técnicas de evolução direta – error-prone PCR e cryodrilling. Numa primeira abordagem foram efectuadas tentativas para o isolamento de fagos de Listeria a partir de efluentes de indústria pecuária com posterior identificação e melhoramento das propriedades líticas das respetivas endolisinas. No entanto, as tentativas não foram bem-sucedidas. Foi efetuada a análise bioinformática das duas diferentes endolisinas – Ply500 and Ply511 – para se obter informações precisas sobre a sua estrutura. Apesar das duas proteínas possuírem uma estrutura modular, Ply511 apresenta um domínio catalítico central com função desconhecida e por conseguinte, pouco caracterizado, relativamente à organização modular de Ply500. A expressão das respetivas endolisinas wild-type em larga e micro escalas foi efetuada com sucesso e confirmada através de testes antibacterianos contra L. monocytogenes 5725. Para melhorar a atividade lítica das respetivas endolisinas, as sequências foram amplificadas por error-prone PCR, clonadas no vetor pQE-30 e transformados em células competentes E. coli JM109. No entanto, não foram obtidas quaisquer colónias. Ao mesmo tempo, usando a endolisina PlyP100, uma nova abordagem baseada no princípio de interação biótica entre fago-hospedeiro, foi efetuada a temperaturas sucessivamente mais baixas de forma a promover a evolução/adaptação do fago e consequentemente da endolisina. xv Index xvi Index Agradecimentos .......................................................................................................................... x Abstract ..................................................................................................................................... xiv Sumário ....................................................................................................................................... x List of abbreviations .................................................................................................................. xxiv List of figures .......................................................................................................................... xxviii List of tables ............................................................................................................................. xxiv CHAPTER 1 – Introduction and Background .............................................................................. 1 1. Listeria monocytogenes and listeriosis .................................................................................... 3 1.1. Adaptation mechanisms ................................................................................................ 4 1.2. Antimicrobial resistance ................................................................................................. 4 2. Bacteriophages as potential means to battle listeriosis ............................................................ 5 2.1. Listeria phages .............................................................................................................. 7 3. Endolysins ............................................................................................................................. 9 3.1. Different types of endolysis ............................................................................................ 9 3.2. Endolysin structure ...................................................................................................... 10 4. Strategies for endolysins improvement ................................................................................. 11 4.1. Phage adaptation “cryodrilling”.................................................................................... 12 4.2. Directed evolution: site-directed mutagenesis Vs. random mutagenesis ........................ 12 4.3. Site-directed mutagenesis ............................................................................................. 13 4.3.1. Domain swapping .............................................................................................. 14 4.4. Random mutagenesis for in vitro directed enzyme evolution ......................................... 15 4.4.1. Chemical mutagenesis....................................................................................... 15 4.4.2. Mutator strains .................................................................................................. 16 4.4.3. Site-saturanting mutagenesis ............................................................................. 16 4.4.4. Error-prone PCR ................................................................................................ 17 5. Advances in molecular engineering of endolysins .................................................................. 18 5.1. Advances using site-directed mutagenesis .................................................................... 19 5.1.1. Advances using domain-swapping ..................................................................... 19 5.2. Advances using random-mutagenesis .......................................................................... 20 6. Main goals of this work ........................................................................................................ 21 xviii CHAPTER 2 – Materials and Methods ..................................................................................... 25 1. Bacterial strains, endolysins and plasmids ........................................................................... 25 2. Listeria phage isolation ........................................................................................................ 26 2.1. Non-lysogenic strains selection ..................................................................................... 26 2.2. Effluent samples and phage detection .......................................................................... 27 2.3. Phage isolation and propagation ................................................................................... 27 3. Protein production ............................................................................................................... 28 3.1. Large-scale production ................................................................................................. 28 3.1.1. Culture and induction ........................................................................................ 28 3.1.2. Cell lysis............................................................................................................ 28 3.1.3. Purification ........................................................................................................ 28 3.1.4. Polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis (SDS-PAGE) ................................................. 29 3.1.5. Protein quantification ......................................................................................... 29 3.2. Micro-scale protein production experiments .................................................................. 30 3.3. Host preparation and antibacterial assays ..................................................................... 30 4. Bioinformatic tools ............................................................................................................... 31 4.1. In silico analysis of bacteriophage endolysins ................................................................ 31 4.2. Primers design ............................................................................................................. 32 5. Cloning ................................................................................................................................ 32 5.1. Polymerase chain reaction (PCR) techniques ................................................................ 33 5.1.1. Error-prone PCR ................................................................................................ 33 5.1.2. Colony-PCR ....................................................................................................... 33 5.2. Plasmid extraction and digestion .................................................................................. 34 5.3. Ligation ........................................................................................................................ 35 5.4. Agarose gel electrophoresis .......................................................................................... 35 6. Transformation .................................................................................................................... 35 6.1. Competent cells ........................................................................................................... 36 6.1.1. Chemio-competent cells .................................................................................... 35 6.1.2. Electrocompetent cells ...................................................................................... 36 6.2. Transformation and plasmid replication ........................................................................ 36 6.2.1. Heat-shock transformation ................................................................................. 36 6.2.2. Electroporation .................................................................................................. 37 xix 7. Directed evolution screening assay ....................................................................................... 37 7.1. Mutant libraries ............................................................................................................ 37 7.2. Screening tests ............................................................................................................. 37 7.2.1. Low temperature tests ....................................................................................... 38 7.2.2. High salt conditions ........................................................................................... 38 8. Cryodrilling .......................................................................................................................... 39 CHAPTER 3 – Results and Discussion..................................................................................... 41 1. Background ......................................................................................................................... 45 2. Listeria phage isolation......................................................................................................... 45 3. In silico analysis of bacteriophage endolysins........................................................................ 46 4. Protein expression preliminary tests ..................................................................................... 48 4.1. Large-sclae protein production ...................................................................................... 48 4.2. Micro-scale protein expression and preliminary tests ..................................................... 48 4.3. Lytic activity – Low temperatures vs. Room temperatures .............................................. 51 5. Cloning ................................................................................................................................ 52 5.1. Gene amplification ........................................................................................................ 52 5.2. Plasmid linearization and ligation .................................................................................. 54 5.3. Transformation ............................................................................................................. 54 6. Cryodrilling .......................................................................................................................... 56 CHAPTER 4 – Conclusions and Future Perspectives ................................................................ 59 1. Conclusions and future perspectives ........................................................................................ 63 Bibliography.......................................................................................................................... 66 Annexes ............................................................................................................................... 76 xx List of abbreviations BCA - Bicinchoninic acid assay CaCl2 – Calcium chloride CBD – Cell-Binding Domain CEB – Centre of Biological Engineering DLA – Double-layer agar DNA – Desoxyribonucleic Acid ds – Double-stranded ECD – Enzymatic Catalytic Domain ECDC – European Centre Disease Prevention and Control EFSA – European Food Safety Authority ep – Error-prone FDA – U.S. Food and Drug Administration GAD – Glutamate Decarboxylase System GlcNAc – N-acetylglucosamine acid GRAS – Generally Recognized as Safe ICTV – International Committee on the Taxonomy of Viruses IPTG – Isopropyl β-D-1-thiogalactopyranoside LB – Lysogeny Broth mDAP – meso-2,6-diaminopimelic acid MurNA – N-acetylmuramic acid PBS – Phosphate Buffered Saline PCR – Polymerase Chain Reaction PEG – Polyethyleneglycol PG – Peptidoglycan PPI – Protein-protein interactions RCA – Rolling-circle rT – Room temperature RM – Random Mutagenesis RNA – Ribonucleic Acid xxiv SDM – Site-Directed Mutagenesis SDS-PAGE - Sodium Dodecyl Sulfate Polyacrylamide Gel Electrophoresis ss – Single-stranded SSM – Site-Saturating Mutagenesis Tm – Melting temperature Tris – Tris(hydroxymethyl)aminomethane TAE – Tris-Acetate-EDTA TSB – Tryptic Soy Broth xxv List of figures Chapter 1 Figure 1 – Phage life cycle: lytic and lysogenic. Phage attaches to host and injects genetic material. In lytic cycle the genomic material is transcripted and replicated by replication and protein synthesis mechanisms of the host cell used to assemble new phage particles and subsequent release by cellular lysis. In the lysogenic cycle the phage genome integrates chromosomal DNA of the host without cell death Adapted from Campbell (2003). ...................................................................... 6 Figure 2 - Representation of peptidoglycan differences between Gram-positive (left) and Gramnegative (right) cells and different type of endolysins mode of action. 1) Glycosidases; 2) Muramidases; 3) lytic transglycosidases; 4) Amidases; 5), 6), 7) e 8) Endopeptidases. Withdrawn from Oliveira et al., (2012) ......................................................................................................... 10 Figure 3 – Overview of the QuickChange Lightning site-directed mutagenesis method. ................ 14 Figure 4 – Diagram scheme comparing the most conventionally random mutagenesis procedures to ep-RCA evidencing the complexity and time-consuming of each method. ..................................... 18 Chapter 2 Figure 1 - Representation scheme of pQE30 cloning vector used to clone the endolysins sequences of ply500 and ply511 ................................................................................................................. 25 Figure 2 - 96-wells plate scheme of antibacterial assay against L. monocytogenes 5725 using Ply500 expressed in micro-scale conditions. Protein expression was tested for 24 and 48 h. Endolysin 68 was used as positive control against outer membrane permeabilzed of P. aeruginosa cells. Negative controls are present in dashed lines wells. Blue wells represents protein expression in 4mL tube; yellow wells the protein expression in micro-scale; green wells protein expression of 200 µL collected from 4 mL expression tube and pink wells represent the protein production in 1 mL collected from four wells. ................................................................................................................................. 31 Figure 3 - 96-wells plate scheme of antibacterial assay against L. monocytogenes 5725 using Ply500 expressed in micro-scale conditions. Protein expression was tested for 24 and 48 h. Endolysin 68 was used as positive control against outer membrane permeabilzed of P. aeruginosa cells. Negative controls are present in dashed lines wells. Blue wells represents protein expression in 4mL tube; yellow wells the protein expression in micro-scale; green wells protein expression of 200 µL collected xxvi from 4 mL expression tube and pink wells represent the protein production in 1 mL collected from four wells. ................................................................................................................................. 38 Chapter 3 Figure 1 – SDS- PAGE electrophoresis gel 12%, stained with Coomassie Blue, for Ply511 (A) and Ply500 (B) proteins. M, Protein Ladder (10-250 kDa) from NEB; F1, 2, 3, and 4, fractions 1, 2, 3 and 4 of eluted proteins; W, wash; FT, flow through. The proteins were eluted with elution buffer containing 250 mM imidazole concentration............................................................................... 48 Figure 2 - Antibacterial assays of Ply500 endolysin against normal and permeabilized L. monocytogenes 5725 cells. The endolysins were expressed in 4 mL broth and cell lysis was done by sonication (A). Protein expression was done in 5 wells (200 µL each well) then joined (1 mL) and sonicated (B). Endolysins were expressed in 200 µL of a 96-wells plate (C). Also protein expression was induced in 4 mL broth (D). Next 200 µL were transferred to 96-wells. Cell lysis was done by chloroform vapors. In all the cases the expression conditions were 16°C during 24 h or 48 h with 1.5 mM IPTG concentration. E. coli JM109 wild-type was used as negative control. ..................... 49 Figure 3– Kinetics of antibacterial assays of Listeria phage endolysins Ply500 and Ply511 at refrigeration temperatures (A) and room temperatures (B). Negative control was done using 180 µL bacterial suspension mixed with 20 µL of PBS. ........................................................................... 51 Figure 4. – PCR of amplified protein genes using temperature gradient between 55-65°C. Gradient temperatures from left to right: 55°C, 57°C, 60°C, 62°C, 65°C. Agarose gel 1% concentration, stained with Sybr Safe and run at 90 V. Legend: M – DNA 1 kb ladder. ....................................... 52 Figure 5 – Amplified endolysins sequences by ep-PCR. The generated products possess 1020 bp (plyP500) and 1176 bp (plyP511) and were then double digested by using selected restriction enzymes and purified. Agarose gel 1% concentration, stained with Sybr Safe and run at 90 V. Legend: M – 1 kb ladder. ........................................................................................................................ 53 Figure 6 – Double digestion of pQE-30 cloning vector in agarose gel 0.7% concentration in order to promote better separation of digested plasmid The gel was stained with Sybr Safe and run at 90 V. Legend: M – DNA 1 kb ladder. ................................................................................................... 54 Figure 7 – Representative illustration pQE-30 vector cloned with ply500 (A) and ply511 (B) using Vector NTI software. The ligation generates two plasmids with different lengths – 4039 bps and 4465 bps, respectively. Both genes are cloned between BamHI and SalI restriction sites...................... 55 xxvii Figure 8 – Colony-PCR results after “heat-shock” transformation using NZY5α E. coli competent cells. Only pQE-30 + ply500 ligation were assembled by competent cells. Agarose gel 1% concentration, stained with Sybr Safe run 90 V. Legend: M – DNA 1 kb ladder. ........................... 56 Figure 9 – PCR of amplified endolysins sequences derived from co-evolved (wells 1-5) and evolved (wells 6-10) adapted phages. Amplified products were visualized by 1% agarose gel, stained with Syber Safe, at 90 V. The marker (M) is 1 kb ladder. .................................................................... 57 Figure 10 – Example of sequencing chromatogram of adapted plyP100 endolysin derived from coevolutionary adapted phage. The putative mutations are highlighted. PlyP100CE1_Fw and PlyP100CE_Rv are the primers used for gene sequencing. ........................................................ 59 xxviii List of tables Chapter 2 Table 1 - L. monocytogenes pathogen strains, references and serovars used for phage isolation.. 40 Table 2 - Designed primers for endolysins sequences amplification. ply500 (primers 1 e 2) e ply511 (primers 3 e 4). Underlined are shown the restriction sites for enzymes BamHI and SalI. Melting temperatures also are present in this table. ................................................................................ 26 Table 3 – PCR conditions for amplification of ply500 and ply511 endolysins sequences in ErrorProne PCR and Colony-PCR. The volumes were calculated for 50 µL of final reaction volume. .... 34 Table 4 – Used primers for amplification of the PlyP100 endolysins derived from phage adapted assays. This primers were already available in the group primers collection. Underlined are shown the restriction sites for enzymes NcoI and BamHI, respectively.. ................................................. 39 Table 5 – PCR conditions for amplification of plyP100 from phage adapted endolysins. The volumes were calculated for 30 µL of final reaction volume. The initialization step at 95°C during 10 minutes was used in order to promote the release of phage DNA. ............................................................ 40 Chapter 3 Table 1 – Putative binding and catalytic domains for Ply500 and Ply511 endolysins. ................... 47 Table 2 – Amplified plyP100 sequences of the 5 different phage plaques isolated from Co-Evolution (CE) and Evolution (E) populations. Once amplified the sequences were aligned and compared to the original plyP100. Point mutations are observable at specific positions. Legend: A – adenine, T – thymine, G – guanine, C – cytosine, * – absence of nucleotide. ................................................. 58 xxix Chapter 1 Introduction and Background CHAPTER 1 INTRODUCTION AND BACKGROUND 1. Listeria monocytogenes and listeriosis The genus Listeria is an important group of Gram-positive and anaerobic bacteria with low G+C content and it is closely related to Bacillus, Clostridium, Enterococcus, Streptococcus and Staphylococcus [1]. It can be isolated from various sources, such as soil, water, effluents and human and animal faeces [2]. Currently it is divided into six species: L. monocytogenes, L. ivanovii, L. seeligeri, L. innocua, L. welshimeri, and L. grayi. L. monocytogenes it is classified as psychrotolerant organism as its optimal growth temperature can vary between 30 and 37ᵒC. It is considered to be highly pathogenic causing listeriosis, a foodborne illness that can induce death (20-30% of fatality rate) especially in risk groups such as elderly, pregnant women and other people with impaired immune system. In this case invasive listeriosis can be triggered causing meningitis, meningoencephalitis, endocardiditis,septicemia, premature births, neonatal listeriosis, stillbirths or misbirths [3][4][5] . Non-invasive listeriosis can cause gastrointestinal infections and mainly affects healthy individuals. It is associated with the ingestion of contaminated food mainly in a wide variety of ready-to-eat foods such as milk, seafood, fish products, meats and meat products [6]. However, the consumption of soft cheese and seafood is the main responsible for the most human listeriosis cases reported [7]. Since 1960’s decade the listeriosis has become more widespread which has been correlated to the increased use of refrigerators, consumption of processed foods and extension of shelf-life food products. According to most recent reports from the European Food Safety Authority (EFSA) and the European Centre Disease Prevention and Control (ECDC) the number of cases with listeriosis infections in Europe is on the increase from 0.1 cases per 100.000 in 2000 to 0.3 cases per 100.000 in 2006. It also refers to Germany, Ireland, Lithuania, the Netherlands, Spain and United Kingdom (UK) as the countries with highest number of infections in the same period [8]. However the increasing demand of consumers for clean-label products in most recent years also has led to a greater scientific investigation, which consequently increased the characterization of this pathogen becoming a well-studied model. Not all strains of L. monocytogenes are equally capable to cause disease in humans and only four serovars – 1/2a, 1/2c, 1/2b and 4b – of the 13 identified for this strain are responsible for 98% of the reported listeriosis cases. The strains with 4b serovar are responsible for most food-borne outbreaks of listeriosis and for the sporadic cases which can suggest that this serovar can possess unique mechanisms of virulence [9]. 3 CHAPTER 1 INTRODUCTION AND BACKGROUND 1.1. Adaptation mechanisms In food industry usually low temperatures, low pH conditions and high salt concentrations are the common conditions in order to preserve food products. However, L. monocytogenes has the ability to generate adaptation mechanisms to maintain its activity, stability and growth, making it difficult to control this pathogen in the food industry [10]. At low temperatures the mechanisms consists mainly in changing the membrane composition increasing unsaturated and shortening fatty acids chains [11], production of cold shock proteins [11][12] and accumulation of solutes as cryoprotectants [13][14]. For survival under acidic stress the induction of specific proteins (GroEL, ATP synthase and transcriptional regulators) [15], mechanism of pH homeostasis achieved by proton transport chain, the glutamate decarboxylase system (GAD) [16] and the two-component regulatory system LisR/ LisK [17] are the main mechanisms of adaptation in low pH conditions. The pathogen also possess osmoadapation mechanisms such as the induction of salt shock proteins, accumulation of compatible solutes such as glycine betaine, proline betaine, acetyl carnitine, carnitine, ϒbutyrobetaine as osmoprotectants. Furthermore, this bacteria has the ability to change the expression levels of transcription genes under adverse conditions through the association of the alternative sigma factor with RNA polymerase core [10]. 1.2. Antimicrobial resistance of L. monocytogenes The current treatment for listeriosis for immunocompromised patients is based on the application of high doses of β-lactam antibiotics (ampicillin or penicillin) alone or in association with aminoglycoside (gentamicin). For allergic people to β-lactam antibiotics the treatment consists in the combination of trimethoprim with sulfonamide [18]. Usually L. monocytogenes is susceptible to a wide range of antibiotics, however, some recent studies reported an increasing antimicrobial resistance to one or more relevant antibiotics in environmental isolates [19][20][21]. In animals the use of antimicrobials can lead to new potential development of antimicrobial-resistant zoonotic foodborne bacterial pathogens, such as L. monocytogenes, that can subsequent be transmitted to humans as food contaminants. Furthermore, spontaneous mutations of this foodborne pathogen agent or gene transfection between antibiotic-resistant bacteria and L. monocytogenes cells may contribute to the increasing of antimicrobial resistance and subsequent spreading in environment and food. 4 CHAPTER 1 INTRODUCTION AND BACKGROUND 2. Bacteriophages as a potential means to battle listeriosis Bacteriophages or phages are viruses that infect specific bacterial cells and represent one of the most abundant biological entities in nature and have been recognized by their potential use as therapeutic agents in alternative to antibiotics [22]. The history of phages started over a century ago (1986) when Ernest Hankin observed bacteriocidal activity against Vibrio cholera from filtered and collected water from Ganges and Jumma River, in India. Almost 20 years after the first observations by Hankin, two investigators, Frederick Twort, an English bacteriologist, and the French-Canadian microbiologist Felix d’Herelle reintroduced the subject and independently identified filterable and transmissible viral particles responsible for bacterial lysis. However, only d’Herelle continue to pursuit this findings and named the viral particles as bacteriophages [23][24]. Phages are omnipresent and accidentally consumed through the ingestion of food or water, they are presumed to be safe as undesirable effects have not been detected. Their different genome sizes, from 17 kpb to 0.5 Mbp and the high frequency of novel genes found in newly characterized phage genomes proof that bacteriophages are genetically extremely diversified. This genetic diversification represent a great advantage in infection role as the ability of phages to evolve and circumvent the defense mechanisms of the host is higher [25]. Bacteriophages are constituted by a protein or lipoprotein coat, called capsid, with different shapes and sizes that encloses nucleic acid genome which can be single-stranded (ss) or double-stranded (ds), circular or linear, DNA or RNA. The International Committee on the Taxonomy of Viruses (ICTV) is responsible for the phage classification that is based on the properties of the virion as morphology and type of nucleic acid form. Currently, over 5,500 phages are known, divided and recognized by ICTV into one order and 14 families, among which 96% are tailed (belongs to Caudovirales order) and possess double-stranded DNA (dsDNA) enclosed in icosahedral symmetry heads and three different tails lengths subdivided in Myoviridae (25%) with contractile tails, Siphoviridae (61%) with noncontractile and long tails and Podoviridae (15%) with short tails [26]. The remaining phages are “cubic”, filamentous or pleomorphic and possess ssDNA, ssRNA or dsDNA as genome and represent 4% of phage population. As a virus, phages are obligatory parasites and needs to infect the host cells. To be able to infect host cells, phages attach to the cell through specific receptors in membrane surface using mechanisms that depends of the virion morphology. The most usual mechanism consists in tail contraction and enzymatic degradation of small portion of cell membrane allowing injection of genetic material. Using the replication mechanisms of the host the synthesis of new phage particles occurs 5 CHAPTER 1 INTRODUCTION AND BACKGROUND which are released by the action of produced lytic proteins responsible for cell lysis (lytic cycle). Phage infection follows the lysogenic cycle, when phage infection leads to the integration of genetic information into the chromosome of the bacterial host without cell death. In lysogenic cycle the phage genome will assume a quiescent state called prophage coexisting in a stable form with the host. The two possible life cycles of phages can be observed in Figure 1. Fig. 1 – Phage life cycle: lytic and lysogenic. Phage attaches to host and injects genetic material. In lytic cycle the genomic material is transcripted and replicated by replication and protein synthesis mechanisms of the host cell used to assemble new phage particles and subsequent release by cellular lysis. In the lysogenic cycle the phage genome integrates chromosomal DNA of the host without cell death Adapted from Campbell et al., (2003) [27]. 6 CHAPTER 1 INTRODUCTION AND BACKGROUND 2.1. Listeria phages The first reports of specific L. monocytogenes phages date from 1940 and 1960. Currently more than 500 Listeria specific phages have been isolated and characterized mainly in the course of phage typing studies. Usually the described Listeria-specific bacteriophages possess dsDNA genomes with sizes between 30-65 kb but a few possess larger genomes (124-140 kb). All Listeria phages belong to Caudovirales order featuring long noncontractile tails (Siphoviridae family) or with complex contractile tails (Myoviridae family). However, no Listeria specific podoviruses have ever been isolated which can be related to the low diversity of morphological structure of this bacterial cells [28] [29]. Listeria bacteriophage genomes contain one module responsible for the encoding of structural proteins, another responsible for encoding DNA functions as recombination, replication and repair. It also contain a lysis cassette which contains holin and endolysin genes. A lysogeny control region with the integrase gene is present in case of the temperate phages, which is responsible for mediate integration of the phage genome into the chromosomal host genome and excision in induction conditions. In fact many Listeria phages are temperate and most of them are capable of generalized transduction [28]. There is already some application of Listeria phages in food industry although this application as biocontrol of bacteria require some specific characteristics: phage must be strictly virulent, feature a broad host-range, unable to perform generalized transduction, does not affect the pathogenicity or virulence of the host and also does not integrate its genome on the genetic material of the host [30]. The well characterized Listeria phage P100 is already used as a biocontrol agent product and it acquired the Generally Recognized as Safe (GRAS) status by U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA). Furthermore P100 phage has been showing some interesting properties, displaying high efficacy by removing Listeria contaminations from fish and cooked ham and Listeria biofilms in steel surfaces [31][32][33]. There are also other FDA-approved anti-Listeria products such as a six-phages cocktail. This cocktail was allowed to reduce Listeria occurrence in food production facilities of fresh cut produce and melons [34]. Some other studies also showed interesting lytic properties of A511 phage against Listeria contaminations on various ready-to-eat food samples providing up to 5 log reduction of this foodborne pathogenic cells [35]. Despite showing many advantages, the use of lytic phages as biocontrol agents in food industry remains unclear, especially in European countries where it remains uncertain whether phages can 7 CHAPTER 1 INTRODUCTION AND BACKGROUND be considered as processing aids or as decontaminants or additives [36]. Furthermore, the lack of studies about phage application in food industry performed in specific preparation, processing and storage conditions is considered to be an obstacle for its application in this field [22]. An alternative way to phage application consists in the use of its recombinant encoded peptidoglycan hydrolases (endolysins) which can be easier to approve than virus-based food additive. Endolysins have no effect on the original organoleptic and texture properties on food and act as an innocuous substance for human consumption, making these type of enzymes a good candidate for control of foodborne pathogens [37]. 3. Endolysins The name endolysin was first coined in 1958 with the aim to designate a proteinaceous lytic substance synthesized inside bacterial cells during phage multiplication and infection stage [38]. Endolysins are dsDNA bacteriophage encoded lytic enzymes that target the integrity of the cell wall and degrade its main constituent, peptidoglycan (PG), causing cell lysis and the consequent release of the bacteriophage progeny [39][40]. During phage infection lysins are produced and accumulated in the cytoplasm, however as they do not have signal sequences to be translocated through the cell membrane this movement is controlled by a holin. The holin is typically expressed in the late stages of the lytic infection cycle, forming a pore in the cell membrane allowing cytoplasmic lysins to access the peptidoglycan, causing cell lysis [41][42][43]. Endolysins are also capable to digest the cell wall when applied exogenously, especially in Grampositive organisms, such as L. monocytogenes, and can lyse the cell wall of healthy and uninfected cells, originating the “lysis from without” phenomenon [39][44]. It proved its ability to be used as alternative antimicrobial agents [40]. Numerous studies have been demonstrating the potential application of phage derived endolysins as biocontrol agents in foods which has been considered a good alternative over other antimicrobial agents. Their high specificity for the target pathogen leaves the natural and desired flora of the food products untouched. Due to their proteinacious nature endolysins are noncorrosive and biodegradable [45]. These applications of lysins as biocontrol agents against foodborne diseases have been recently reviewed [46]. The first and more obvious approach in control strategy consists in the application of purified endolysins to food products. 8 CHAPTER 1 INTRODUCTION AND BACKGROUND Some studies have reported the staphylococcal phage endolysin LysH5 [47] rapidly showed great lytic activity in pasteurized milk, reducing bacterial numbers below the detection level within 4 h. Also streptococcal lysins B30 [48] and Ply700 [49] and the Clostridium butyricum phage ΦCTP1 [50] lysin reported to be high lytic activity in milk and milk products. The three Listeria phage endolysins Ply118, Ply511 and PlyP35 exhibit high thermoresistance which is a very important characteristic for products that undergo heat treatment such as pasteurized milk products [51]. Another approach is the production and release of this endolysins in starter organisms in fermentation processes. This alternative has been reported for derived Listeria and Clostridium phage endolysins, although no studies of application in food has been yet demonstrated [52][53][54]. In conclusion, phage endolysins represent a good alternative for the control of foodborne pathogens. However some tests are required to verify their stability on other food products and consumer safety. Physiochemical conditions where these type of biocontrol agents act, must be first evaluated as well. Furthermore, it has to be economically attractive possible to justify an investment of it application in food industry [55]. 3.1. Different types of endolysins The cell wall is responsible for maintaining the shape and physical integrity, protecting against mechanical damage and osmotic rupture. Peptidoglycan is the main constituent and it is composed of several chains of N-acetylmuramic acid and N-acetylglucosamine residues, linked together by β1,4-glycosidic bonds, connected to a short stem tetrapeptide side chains [40][55]. Adjacent tetrapeptides may be cross-linked by an interpeptide bond (in Gram-negative bacteria) or by an interpeptide bridge (in Gram-positive bacteria) [40]. In Gram-negative bacteria the cell wall is relatively thin (10 nm) and is composed by single layer of PG surrounded by an outer membrane. In these organisms, lactyl ether connects the glycan backbone to a peptide side chain that contains mostly L- and D-amino acids [56]. In Gram-positive bacteria, the cell wall is thick (15-80 nanometers), consisting of several layers of PG. Running perpendicular to the PG sheets is a group of molecules called teichoic acids which are unique for these organisms. In this case the cell wall it is considerably more diverse in length and composition coinciding with many different peptide arrangements among PG. Peptidoglycans may vary the amino in position 3 of the tetrapeptide, defining two types of PGs: meso2,6-diaminopimelic acid type (mDAP-type) in Gram-negative and some Gram-positive species (i.e. L. monocytogenes) and a l-Lysine type (Lys-Type) typical for Gram-positive species [55][57]. 9 CHAPTER 1 INTRODUCTION AND BACKGROUND Therefore, endolysins can be divided in five classes according to their enzymatic specificity. Glycosidases (Fig.2, target 1) cleave the glycan component at the reducing end of Nacetylglucosamine (GlcNAc) [58] or at the reducing end of N-acetylmuramic acid (MurNAc) [59]. Muramidases/lysozymes (Fig. 2, target 2) share the same glycan target as the lytic transglycosidases (Fig. 2, target 3), however both form different products. The 1,6-anhydro bond is formed instead of the muramic acid residue, due to absence of water that is important for correct function of transglycosidase activity [60]. N-acetylmuramoyl-L-alanine amidases (Fig. 2, target 4) cut the amide bond between N-acetylmuramic acid residues and L-amino acid residues. These types of endolysins are responsible for the strongest destabilization effect in the peptidoglycan layer. Endopeptidases (Fig. 2, target 5, 6, 7 and 8) cleave the peptides moieties attacking LD- and DD-bonds. Fig. 2 - Representation of peptidoglycan differences between Gram-positive (left) and Gram-negative (right) cells and different type of endolysins mode of action. 1) Glycosidases; 2) Muramidases; 3) Transglycosidases; 4) Amidases; 5), 6), 7) e 8) Endopeptidases. Withdrawn from Oliveira et al., (2012) [55] 3.2. Endolysin structure Generally, the sizes of phage endolysins are between 25 and 45 kDa. The only exception is the 114 kDa streptococcal bacteriophage C1 endolysin, PlyC, as it is a multimeric lysin with globular structure [61]. Endolysins can vary in their molecular structure, modular or globular, and in their domain orientations. 10 CHAPTER 1 INTRODUCTION AND BACKGROUND The typical feature for all Gram-positive phage endolysins is their two-domain structure also called modular structure which is composed by an enzymatic catalytic domain (ECD) at the N-terminal and the cell wall binding (CBD) domain at the C-terminal [39][41][44]. A few endolysins which have a modular organization display an inverted structure, with the ECD at the C-terminal and CBD at the N-terminal. Gram-negative derived phage endolysins usually presents a globular structure with only ECD. The evolutionary explanation for the occurrence of CBD domains only in Gram-positive endolysins is based on previous studies by Fischetti et al., (2008) [41] and Loessner et al., (2002) [62] which say that CBD domain binds irreversibly to the cell wall preventing the lysis of surrounded cells before the new phage particles release. Thus it can be said that phages are induced to produce right amounts of enzymes to induce the cell lysis. This phenomenon is not verified in Gram-negative bacteria because the presence of the protective outer membrane inhibits the external lysin treatment. The ECD function consists in the cleavage of the bacterial cell wall while the CBD is responsible for the substrate recognition after cell binding. The main advantage of modular organization is that it enables the specificity binding and the enzyme activity in an independent way, enabling the substitution of either domain with other domain from another enzyme [63][64]. Furthermore, some interesting studies have demonstrated that some endolysins acquired more than a single ECD, such as endopeptidase/amidase lysin from the phage phi11 and endopeptidase/muramidase from Streptococcus agalactiae bacteriophage B30 Hermoso (2003) [65] and Pritchard (2004) [59]. 4. Strategies for endolysins improvement Natural evolution results in a large number of enzyme variants which exhibit their specific function and efficiency adjusted only to perform under physiological activities. Therefore, naturally occurring enzymes often lack features necessary for biotechnology industry applications. In this field this study pretends to accelerate the evolutionary process of a well-adapted endolysin to the most adversal conditions in food industry more specifically at low temperatures and high salt and low pH conditions. The strategies consists in phage adaptation at successively low temperatures, also known as cryodrilling and one of the most used random mutagenesis technique, error-PCR. However some other methods for directed evolution are presented in this section in order to individually compare the advantages of each technical approach. 11 CHAPTER 1 INTRODUCTION AND BACKGROUND 4.1. Phage adaptation – “Cryodrilling” Interactions in many host-parasites are influenced by biology and environment conditions. The pathogenic parasites impose selection for resistant hosts which in turn impose selection for infective parasites resulting in rapid antagonist coevolution. According to the Red Queen hypothesis these biotic interactions give rise to continual natural selection for adaptation and counter-adaptation playing an important role in molecular evolution and consequently in population dynamic [66]. There are two types of antagonistic coevolution: the “arms race” dynamics, leading to broader resistance range in the host against a greater number of parasite genotypes and an increased variability of host allowing the infection of most host genotypes; and the fluctuating selection dynamics, favoring hosts that resists to the most common parasite phage genotypes, not contributing for directional evolution of host range. Coevolutionary dynamics between hosts and parasites is increasingly investigated using experimental evolution. The most used model for antagonistic coevolutionary studies are bacteria and their lytic phages. Pseudomonas fluorescens SBW25 and its lytic phage ϕ2 is the most studied model of bacteriaphage evolution given deeper knowledge about this process and coevolution interactions. Although it is important to diversify this coevolutionary studies to other host-parasite dynamics with particularly importance in human health as they can be applied as biocontrol agents [67][68][69]. 4.2 Directed evolution: site-directed mutagenesis Vs. random mutagenesis Two contradictory tools can be used on a molecular level: rational protein design and directed evolution. The first method requires extensive information about relationships between sequence structures, mechanisms and function of the enzyme. Directed evolution concept was first introduced in 1967 [70]. It is a laboratory in vitro process responsible for the generation of proteins, enzymes, metabolic pathways and entire genomes with desired properties under different conditions, such as extreme temperatures, pH and salinity [71]. Directed evolution implements an iterative Darwinian optimization process, whereby the fittest variants are selected from an ensemble of random mutations [72]. Despite the advances to date on the industrially enzymes, the most challenging part of the directed evolution experiment consists in the development of generic screening or selection tools, identifying novel enzymes activities more efficiently [73][74]. 12 CHAPTER 1 INTRODUCTION AND BACKGROUND Our understanding of protein function has been enhanced significantly since the early 1980s, due to the advent of site-directed mutagenesis (SDM) and random mutagenesis (RM). The use of SDM for the generation of mutations at specified sites within a known polynucleotide sequence is an extremely common process nowadays, providing a very powerful tool for the manipulation of sequences and structures. However, there are certain limitations associated with this technique such as lack of sufficient structural information or the need to know which sites within a molecule should be investigated in detail. At that point, RM has proved to be very useful to identify functional sites within a protein or nucleic acid sequences. Moreover, RM can provide the opportunity to screen proteins, which has previously been determined, for structurally important residues or sites, without introducing the selective bias typical of directed approach. RM also allows the study of regulatory nature and structural features of nucleic acid sequences, such as promoters, enhancers, ribosome binding sequences, transcription termination sequences, structures and functions of transfer and ribosomal RNA, the processes involved in viral assembly, in the primary transcript splicing and the initiation of nucleic acid replication. When combining RM technique with later measurements large and useful amounts of important information can be obtained that suggest targets in order that a site-specific or random oligonucleotide approach can be posteriorly directed [75]. 4.3 Site-directed mutagenesis SDM has a variety of applications and is an important tool in molecular biology that has revolutionized the study of gene regulation and protein structure-function relationship [76]. The SDM techniques can be grouped into two major categories: polymerase chain reaction (PCR)-based or non-PCR-based [77]. The first, also known as single-primer, uses an oligonucleotide complementary to part of single-strand DNA. The primer contain an internal mismatch to promote the desired mutation. However, because of the several limitations of this method, low and variable mutants were obtained, which forced the use of suitable screening approaches to identify mutants [75]. The second strategy, denominated by “cassette mutagenesis” refers to the replacement of a region of interest with a synthetic mutant fragment generated by annealing complementary oligonucleotides [78] or by hybridization and ligation of a number of oligonucleotides [79]. The main disadvantages of this method is that in most of the cases, it needs at least two rounds of primer-based mutagenesis 13 CHAPTER 1 INTRODUCTION AND BACKGROUND to introduce suitable restriction enzyme sites into templates and it is not appropriate for routine mutagenesis [80]. Several approaches of SDM technique have been published. However this method generally are labor intensive or technically difficult. To overcome this difficulties QuickChange Lightning Site-Directed Mutagenesis (Fig. 3) is a commercial Kit by Stratagene used that allows site-specific mutations. The main advantage of its usage is that eliminates the need for subcloning and for single-stranded DNA rescue. Furthermore, does not require specialized vectors, unique restriction sites, multiple transformations or in vitro methylation treatment steps. Also a single kit allows rapid, efficient and accurate mutagenesis of small and large plasmids. Fig. 3 - Overview of the QuikChange Lightning site-directed mutagenesis method. 4.3.1 Domain swapping Domains are the most important functional units in proteins and a significant proportion of proteinprotein interactions (PPI). Domain swapping is a mechanism for forming oligomeric assemblies. In domain swapping, a secondary or tertiary element of a monomeric protein is replaced by the same element of another protein. Domain swapping can range from secondary structure elements to whole structural domains [81]. It also represents a model of evolution for functional adaptation by oligomerisation of enzymes that have their active site at subunit interfaces [82]. 14 CHAPTER 1 INTRODUCTION AND BACKGROUND The modular architecture of phage lysins of Gram-positive background and the knowledge accumulated in recent years from available crystal structures and bioinformatics allows the creation of a protein with multiple modules of a single origin and also any desired amino acid sequence and function [83][84][85]. 4.4 Random Mutagenesis for in vitro directed enzyme evolution Random Mutagenesis (RM) is a powerful tool for generating enzymes, proteins and entire metabolic pathways or even entire genomes with improved properties. RM mechanisms can be divided into five different categories: (i) transitions, involving substitution of a purine by another, or a pyrimidine by a second pyrimidine, (ii) transversions, involving substitution of a purine nucleotide by a pyrimidine, or vice versa, (iii) deletions, in which one or more nucleotides are deleted from a gene, (iv) insertions, one or more extra nucleotides are incorporated into a gene, and (v) inversions, involving the 180º rotation of a double-stranded DNA segment [86]. There are many methods by random mutagenesis that can generate genetic diversity such as treating DNA or entire bacteria with chemical mutagens [87], passing cloned genes using mutator strains [88], error-prone PCR (ep-PCR) [89], site-saturating mutagenesis (SSM) [90] and finally by using rolling circle error-prone PCR (ep-RCA) [91]. 4.4.1 Chemical mutagenesis In vitro chemical mutagenesis is one of the most used techniques for the generation of random mutagenesis in DNA and it does not involve the introduction of heterologous DNA or the manipulation of interesting DNA by recombinant methods [86][87]. Despite of several chemicals have been tested, the majority of the compounds cannot be used due to damage caused in the cell [87]. Consequently only five of the best-understood treatments are currently widely employed in generating randomly distributed single-point mutations in vitro: nitrous acid, sulfurous acid, hydroxylamine, hydrazine and mil-acid hydrolysis [75]. The main advantage of chemical mutagenesis is associated with the simple usage and the low cost processing. On the other hand, the main disadvantage is its inefficient control of the mutation rate and limitation to amino acid substitutions [86]. 15 CHAPTER 1 INTRODUCTION AND BACKGROUND 4.4.2 Mutator strains Another useful random mutagenesis method is the bacterial mutator strain method that introduces random point mutations into whole genes. The most popular mutator strain is Escherichia coli XL1Red which lacks the DNA repair pathways, MutS, MutD and MutT resulting in a ≈ 5000-fold random mutation rate higher than the wild type strain [91]. Transformation of the mutator strain and recovery of the mutant from the transformant are the two main steps for the using mutator strain protocol. The main advantages of this method are its simplicity and absence of a ligation step, and it can incorporate a wide variety of mutations such as substitutions, deletions and frame-shift mutations. The several steps of the growth, plasmid isolation, transformation and re-growth, of this process originates a progressively sickness of the mutator strain. Additionally this method generates a low mutation frequency under standard conditions and requires a long cultivation period (longer than 24h) for introduce multiple mutations [86]. 4.4.3 Site-saturating mutagenesis Site-saturation mutagenesis (SSM) is another powerful technique for protein optimization due to its simplicity and efficiency in which a single amino acid can be substituted to any other 19 possible substituents [92][93]. As a result, the mutagenesis product is a collection of clones, each having a different codon in the targeted position, so it is called “saturated”. Whole plasmid single-round PCR it is a technique that makes SSM method more efficient [90]. This method uses two complementary primers containing a mutant codon with partial overlap in the 5’ region that improve the amplification efficiency by decreasing formation primers dimers. This amplification method requires the parental DNA which is then degraded by using methylation-dependent endonuclease digestion. As a result a circular, nicked and containing mutated gene vector is produced that can be transformed directly in E. coli cells [92]. The advantage of this procedure is that eliminates time-consuming subcloning, ligation and singlestranded DNA rescue. The main disadvantages refers to only two nucleotides can be replaced at a time and it does not work well with large plasmids (>10 kB). This method was already successfully applied to generate improved activity of proteins under study [94][95][96]. 16 CHAPTER 1 INTRODUCTION AND BACKGROUND 4.4.4 Error-prone PCR Error-Prone PCR (ep-PCR) is the most used method to generate random mutagenesis into a defined DNA sequence that is too long to be chemically synthesized. It consists in reducing the fidelity of the DNA polymerase which can introduce random mutations during the PCR process [97]. In ep-PCR process the fidelity of the DNA polymerase is modulated by alteration of the conditions of reaction buffer, increasing the error rate. The conditions are the addition of Mn2+ for reducing base pair specificity [98]; increase Mg2+ concentration for stabilizing no complementary base pairs [99]; unbalanced dNTP stoichiometry in order to achieve misincorporation; increase the concentration of DNA polymerase and altering the extension time [100]. After PCR, three steps are required to clone the library of genes into a host strain: digestion of the product with restriction enzymes, separation of the fragments by agarose gel electrophoresis and ligation into a vector, which makes it a very time consuming method [101]. In addition, the success of this method depends of the mutational bias of DNA polymerase, because most part of low-fidelity polymerases used nowadays show strong mutational preferences that can favor the substitution of certain nucleotides instead of others, causing the reduction of library diversity [86]. Studies by Vanherck et al., (2005) [102] combined to different low-fidelity DNA polymerases, Taq polymerase and Mutazyme, which exhibit opposite mutational spectra. This strategy should permit generating unbiased libraries or libraries with a specific degree of mutational bias by applying optimal mutagenesis frequencies through ep-PCR and controlling the concentration of template in the shuffling reaction while taking into account the GC content of the target gene. Other studies by Asano et al., (2005) [103], Edmond et al., (2008) [104] and Maeda et al., (2008) [105] have used the efficiency of ep-PCR method in the modification of enzymes with the aim to increase their potential in industrial applications. A variation of traditional ep-PCR is called error-prone rolling circle amplification (ep-RCA) and it is an in vitro amplification DNA method which amplifies circular DNA by a rolling circle mechanism, yielding linear DNA composed of tandem repeats of the circular DNA sequence [106]. This technique does not require specific primers because random hexamers can be used as a universal primer for any template and does not require a thermal-cycler because the amplification reaction proceeds at a constant temperature. Furthermore, ep-RCA products can be used directly to transform a host strain (Fig. 4). 17 CHAPTER 1 INTRODUCTION AND BACKGROUND Ep-RCA consists of only one DNA amplification step followed by direct transformation of the host strain and producing mutants with an adequate mutation frequency, about 3–4 mutations per kilobase, for in vitro evolution experiments without using restriction enzymes, ligases, specific primers or special equipment such as a thermal-cycler are required. This method will enable random mutagenesis to become a more commonly used technique. Fig. 4 - Diagram scheme comparing the most conventionally random mutagenesis procedures to ep-RCA evidencing the complexity and time-consuming of each method. 5 Advances in molecular engineering of endolysins Despite that some endolysins have been optimized by their natural evolution and selection processes, in most of the cases there is still potential for improvement of their activity and stability, especially in complex environments such as certain food matrices [107]. Therefore, protein engineering based on directed evolution approaches can alter some endolysins properties for specific biotechnology applications. In this section some studies and advances in molecular engineering of endolysins will be discussed using site-directed and random mutagenesis approaches 18 CHAPTER 1 INTRODUCTION AND BACKGROUND 5.1. Advances using site-directed mutagenesis In this case, the enzymatic optimization is done through localized changes in amino acids and then the effect on lytic activity is examined. The alteration of conserved amino acids in the streptococcal B30 endolysin CHAP and lysozyme domains resulted in a sequential loss of activity from each domain [59]. Afterward, Donovan et al., (2006) [48] analyzed this dual domain lysin on live bacteria and concluded that the B30 endolysin CHAP domain was the primary source of activity when lysing “from-without”. Site-directed mutagenesis and deletion analyses of the Bacillus anthracis phage lysin PlyG were essential in defining the binding domain and active site residues. These observations provided new knowledge about the mechanism of specific binding of lysin to B. anthracis and may be useful in establishing new methods for detection of B. anthracis [108]. Nelson et al., (2006) [61] also examined the streptococcal bacteriophage C1 lysin PlyC, using point mutations and concluded that subunit PlyCA is responsible for catalytic activity. The active-site residues were confirmed too. Similarly, site-directed mutations altering histidine codons in the staphylococcal glycyl-glycine PG hydrolase ALE-1 have been used to define essential amino acids in the M23 endopeptidase domain [109]. Low et al., (2011) [110] demonstrated the influence of a positive net charge in the peptidoglycan layer induced by site-directed mutagenesis. The increase of the positive net charge can be favorable for ECD function independently of its CBD through amino acid replacement. This can be important for fine-tuning enzyme activity, such as in cases where efficacy of an enzyme is limited by its size. The already described knowledge of binding domains and active site residues of these endolysins is very useful when constructing novel fusion constructs for the purpose of making a better antimicrobial agent. 5.1.1. Advances using domain-swapping The earliest approaches to alter regulatory properties were created by exchange of the CBDs of pneumococcal autolysins (LytA) and phage endolysins Cpl-1 [111][112]. Studies by Lopes et al., (1997) [64] concluded that the fusion of lactococcal N-acetylmuramidase catalytic domains to choline-binding domains from pneumococcal endolysin CBD resulted in choline dependence of the chimeric enzyme. Croux et al., (1993) [113], made the reverse experiment by combining a clostridial CBD with LytA, thereby rendering the chimera active against choline-containing pneumococcal cell walls and abolishing its activity against clostridial cell walls. 19 CHAPTER 1 INTRODUCTION AND BACKGROUND More recently, Donovan et al., (2006) [114], fused full-length and truncated versions of the Streptococcus agalactiae phage B30 endolysin to mature lysostaphin, yielding enzymes that were active against both streptococcal and staphylococcal cells. Similar to the studies with protein chimeras of pneumococcal and clostridial origin, the exchange of Listeria phage CBDs of different serovar specificity also yielded enzymes with swapped lytic properties and enhanced activity, which constitute interesting antimicrobial candidates for control of the pathogen. In the same study it was also possible to combine the binding specificities of different single CBDs in heterologous tandem CBD constructs, which were then able to recognize the majority of Listeria strains. Manoharadas et al., (2009) [115], created a fusion of the insoluble S. aureus phage P68 endolysin with a minor coat protein of the same phage and demonstrated that in certain cases, modular engineering of endolysins may also solve solubility problems ensuring efficient production and purification of otherwise insoluble lytic proteins. 5.2. Advances using random-mutagenesis Random mutagenesis is another approach to improve lytic activity of phage endolysins. One of the first studies consisted in mutate the gene coding for the S. agalactiae phage endolysin PlyGBS using two DNA mutagenesis, E. coli mutator strain and ep-PCR. After repeated rounds of mutagenesis and screening a mutant with 28-fold activity was obtained comparatively to the parental enzyme. It also resulted in the incorporation of unpredicted sequences at the C-terminus of the generated mutant endolysin. The screening method in this study selected enzyme mutants with high diffusion capability such as the C-terminal truncation which is smaller than a molecule lacking a CBD. This methodology can be applied for identification of endolysin mutants with improved activity under various pH and salt conditions or certain food products [84]. However, the screening method has to be adapted for every individual condition. Studies by Heselpoth et al., [116] involved PlyC endolysin thermostability improvement. In this study, the random mutagenesis approach was used to improve the thermal stability through the use of epPCR, followed by an optimized screening process. The results suggested the methodology generated PlyC mutants that retain high activities when compared to wild-type after elevated temperature treatment. 20 CHAPTER 1 INTRODUCTION AND BACKGROUND 6. Main goals of this work In recent years, listeriosis has become more widespread due to the increasing consumption of processed foods and extension of shelf-life food products. The phage derived endolysins are appointed as the best alternative to antibiotic and phage usage as biocontrol agents. Furthermore, endolysins have no effect on the original organoleptic and texture properties on food acting as an innocuous substance for human consumption making these type of enzymes a good candidate for control of foodborne pathogens such as L. monocytogenes. However, naturally occurring enzymes often lack features necessary for biotechnology industry applications. Beyond that, little is known about endolysin function in food storage and processing conditions - low temperatures, low pH conditions and high salt concentrations. There is also a lack of knowledge aiming the improvement of derived Listeria phage endolysins using random mutagenesis techniques. This study pretends to accelerate the evolutionary process, through the use of directed evolution strategies, aiming to generate well-adapted endolysins to the most adverse conditions in food industry such as low temperatures and also, high salt and low pH conditions. Two different directed evolution strategies will be used in this work: error-PCR, the most used random mutagenesis technique and cryodrilling which mainly consists in biotic interaction of phage-host aiming its adaptation at successively low temperatures. Therefore, this work will have two well-defined objectives: The first objective is to improve endolysins activity at low temperatures, known as refrigerator temperatures. The second objective is to reduce the usage of phage and chemical compounds application in food industry by using the improved endolysins. 21 Chapter 2 Materials and Methods CHAPTER 1 INTRODUCTION AND BACKGROUND 1. Bacterial strains, endolysins and plasmids Criovials of E. coli JM109 containing two different Listeria monocytogenes phage endolysins – pQE30-ply500 (accession nº Q37979) and pQE-30-ply511 (accession nº Q38653) – and pQE-30 plasmid with CBD-P35 sequence were kindly provided by Doctor Mathias Schmelcher from Swiss Federal Institute of Technology Zurich – Department of Health Sciences and Technology. The pQE-30 plasmid, present in Figure 1 was used for every cloning step. E. coli JM109 strain belonging to the Centre of Biological Engineering of University of Minho (CEB) was used as the expression vector. Cultures of this strains, previously transformed with pQE-30, were done using Lysogeny Broth (LB, Liofilchem) supplemented with 100 µg/mL ampicillin (AppliChem). Overnight cultures E. coli BL21 (CEB collection) containing Lys68 sequence (plasmid PET28a68gpLys) growth in LB supplemented with tetracycline marker (30 µg/mL). After growth overnight at 37°C and 120 rpm agitation (Environmental Shaker incubator ES- 20/60), cultures were diluted 1:100 in fresh medium and incubated in the same conditions until reach exponential growth phase. The induction for protein expression was accomplished by adding Isopropyl β-D-1thiogalactopyranoside (IPTG) (Sigma-Aldrich). For Listeria phage isolation twelve bacterial strains were used and are present in Table 1. All the strains were grown overnight in static incubator at 37°C in Tryptic Soy Broth (TSB) (Sigma-Aldrich) agar plates and incubated next day in TSB broth maintaining the growth conditions. Fig. 1 - Representation scheme of pQE30 cloning vector used to clone the endolysins sequences of ply500 and ply511 25 CHAPTER 2 MATERIALS AND METHODS 2. Listeria phage isolation 2.1. Non-lysogenic strains selection In order to avoid the selection of temperate phages, lysogeny test was performed to verify if the strains used for phage detection did not possess lysogenic activity – prophages – responsible for bacterial lysis. A double-layer agar (DLA) test was used to perform the lysogeny test [117]. This method consists in two LB broth medium layers supplemented with different agar concentrations, 1.2% and 0.6% for bottom layer and top agar respectively. All bacteria, previously grown overnight, were resuspended in 100 µL of NaCl 0.1 mM and then gently homogenized in 5 mL of top-agar and poured into bottom agar layer of petri plate previously prepared. This procedure was done for all twelve L. monocytogenes strains listed in table 1. Ten µL of each Listeria strain in every bacterial lawn was placed. Bacterial lawns plates were dried at room temperature and incubated overnight. Next day, by observing the plates, the strains that generate an inhibition halo should be discarded from phage isolation methodology. Table 1 - L. monocytogenes pathogen strains, references and serovars used for phage isolation. Bacterial strain Reference Serotype Listeria monocytogenes CECT 5725 4c CECT 5873 1/2a CECT 911 1/2c CECT 933 3a CECT 934 4a CECT 936 1/2b CECT 937 3b CECT 938 3c CECT 4031 1a 923 4b 994 4ab strain Scott A 4b 26 CHAPTER 2 MATERIALS AND METHODS 2.2. Effluent samples and phage detection For Listeria phage isolation four different effluent fonts were examined: two local sewage treatment plan (Braga and Vila Verde); one effluent from local livestock industries and one water sample from Rio Este (Braga). The samples were stored at 4°C until properly treatment and evaluation. Throughout this procedure two times concentrated TSB medium was used. Depending of the amount of large debris present in effluent, the sample was centrifuged between 10-30 min at 9000 g, 4°C. The supernatant was then filtered through a 0.45 µm and 0.22 µm pore-size filters (VWR) preventing the passage of remaining bacterial cells. Each sample (20 mL) was then mixture with equal volume of sterile TSB broth and divided in three batches (40 mL each). Forty µL of bacterial suspension previously grown overnight was added to each batch wand incubated for 24 hours at the same temperature and agitation conditions. Each one of the twelve L. monocytogenes strains were used to form confluent lawn over the surface of the plate and 10 µL of treated sample was placed in each plate. The plates were dried and then inverted and incubated overnight. Next day phage the formation of phage plaques and the plaque-forming unit (PFU) were evaluated. 2.3. Phage isolation and propagation When isolating phages in environmental samples it is important to realize that the phage populations may consist of several phage strains, hence there is a need to obtain pure strains since a plaque might contain more than one type of phage. In order to obtain pure phage strains, different phage plaques were individually toothpicked to new individual plates with the same bacterial lawns from which they were initially isolated. The phage was spread across the surface of a new second plate with a sterile piece of paper and incubated overnight in the same optimal conditions of the host. After add 4 mL of SM buffer (100 mM NaCl, 8 mM MgSO4, 50 mM Tris-HCl, pH 7.5) to suspend lysis zones plates were incubated overnight at 4°C. Then the buffer and top agar were centrifuged at 9000 g for 10 min at 4°C and exposed to chloroform (4 volumes to 1 volume of sample) for bacterial cells removal and suspension filtered with 0.22 µm pore diameter membrane. For phage precipitation, 0.5 g of NaCl was added to 10 mL of sample and incubated at 4°C for 1 h and the centrifuge step was repeated. The supernatant was recovered and mixed with polyethylene glycol (PEG) (Sigma-Aldrich) (1 g for 10 mL of sample) and incubated overnight. After repeat the centrifugation step, supernatant was discarded and the pellet resuspended in a low volume of SM buffer (2-10 mL). Finally, 3 volumes of chloroform were added to 9 mL of sample, vortexed and 27 CHAPTER 2 MATERIALS AND METHODS centrifuged at 3500 g for 15 minutes at 4°C. Supernatant was recovered and filtered using 0.22 µm pore diameter membrane and stored at 4°C. 3. Protein production 3.1. Large scale production 3.1.1. Culture and induction Cultures of E. coli JM109 containing the wild-type endolysins genes were cultured as previously described in section 1 with a final volume of 250 mL broth. Once reach the exponential phase (OD600nm≈0.6) the culture was induced with 0.5 mM IPTG concentration and incubated (MIR-254-PE cooled incubator) overnight at 16 °C with 200 rpm (Orbital Shakers MIR-S100-PE) agitation. 3.1.2. Lysis After the incubation period cultures were centrifuged at 4 °C, 4500 g (SIGMA 3-16K Centrifuge), during 30 min. The supernatant was discarded and the pellet was resuspended in 10 mL of cold lysis buffer (20 mM NaH2PO4, 0.5 M NaCl/ NaOH, pH 7.4). After transfer the lysate to a new 50 mL tube it was exposed to three freezing and thawing cycles by exposing the sample at -80 °C during 20 min and then thawed at room temperature. The sample was then submitted to ten sonication cycles of 30 seconds of pulse (30 kHz) and 30 seconds of rest (Ultrasonic Processors from ColeParmer). Insoluble cell debris was removed by centrifugation at 4 °C, 4500 g for 30 min. Supernatant was filtered and collected through two different filters of 0.45 µm and 0.22 µm, sequentially. 3.1.3. Purification Collected samples were purified through the use of gravitational His-Trap columns (GE Healthcare) based on the affinity of immobilized nickel present in the column for the N-terminal poly-histidine tail present in cloning vector. To remove another possible proteins, columns were firstly washed using 10 mL of equilibration buffer (lysis buffer with 25 mM imidazole), followed by the binding buffer (25 mM imidazole), and 10 mL of wash buffer (lysis buffer with 25mM imidazole) to remove contaminant proteins. Finally the protein was eluted using 2 mL of elution buffer (300 mM imidazole) and kept at 4 °C for further analysis. The collected fractions in this procedure were analyzed by SDS-PAGE. 28 CHAPTER 2 MATERIALS AND METHODS 3.1.4. Polyacrylamide Gel Electrophoresis (SDS-PAGE) Produced proteins fractions were visualized by using standard denaturation SDS-PAGE according to Schagger and von Jagow conditions [118]. Gels with 0.75mm thickness, 3.75% of upper and a 12% lower stacking and separating acrylamide (composition described in Anexe A, Table A1) were assembled to perform the electrophoresis. Samples of 10 µL were mixed with application buffer (x2) (125 mM Tris-HCl pH 6.8 (Biorad), 20% glicerol (p/v) (Biorad), 1% β-mercaptoetanol (v/v) (Sigma), 0,01% bromofenol blue (p/v) (Biorad), SDS 4% (p/v) (Biorad)) boiled at 95°C for 5 min and loaded onto the gels together with Protometrics ladder (National Diagnostics). Generally proteins were separated for 2 h at 90 V using TGS buffer 1x (25 mM Tris, pH 8,6, 192 mM glycine e 0.1% SDS) in MiniPROTEAN®Tetra system (Bio-Rad). Gels were stained using Coomassie Blue R-250 solution (0,25% Coomassie Blue R-250 (p/v) (Biorad), 50% methanol (v/v) (Fisher Scientific) and 10% acetic acid (v/v) (Fisher Scientific)) for 15 min. Background distaining was done in several wash steps with distilled water in the same agitation conditions above described. Gels were conserved in distilled water for further observation and analysis. Only eluted fractions with intense bands of protein were posteriorly dialyzed in phosphate buffered (PBS) (137 mM NaCl, 10 mM phosphate, 2.7 mM KCl, pH 7.4) (1x) using Amicon Ultra 0.5 mL columns (Milipore). 3.1.5. Protein quantification Total protein concentration was measured through of bicinchoninic acid methodology [119] using BCA Protein Assay Kit (Thermo Scientific) and following the manufacturer instructions. For better calculation of protein content, dilutions of 10, 30 and 50 times of protein sample were initially done using PBS 1X. To measure protein concentration, 200 µL of BCA solution was done and mixed with 25 µL of each diluted protein sample. The mix was incubated during 30 minutes at 37°C and OD580nm was measured in Synergy 2 Multi-Mode Microplate Reader (Biotek). Calibration curve was performed using different Bovine Serum Albumin concentrations (0-2000 µg/mL) (Fig. C1 – Annexe C). 29 CHAPTER 2 MATERIALS AND METHODS 3.2. Micro-scale protein production experiments In order to determine optimal conditions, cultures of E. coli JM109 containing Ply500 endolysin gene in pQE-30 vector, wild-type E. coli JM109 and E. coli BL21 containing plasmid PET28a-68gpLys were done using the same conditions previously described in section 1. Next day, beyond the dilution already described in section 1, a dilution of 1:10 was also done in each well of the 96-wells plate with a final volume of 200 µL. Once reached exponential phase, cultures were inducted with 1.5 mM IPTG and incubated ate 16 °C (MIR-254-PE cooled incubator) with 250 rpm (Orbital Shakers MIR-S100-PE) agitation for 24 and 48 h. The decreasing of cellular growth in the first three hours after induction was measured by spectrophotometry (OD620nm) evaluating the correct protein expression. After incubation time, cultures present in the different wells of the original microplate were joined up to 1 mL in new eppendorfs and centrifuged at 6000 g (VWR MicroStar 17R) for 10 min. The pellet was resuspended in 500 µL of PBS and submitted to sonication as described in 3.1.2. Also, 200 µL of each original tube culture were collected and placed in new different wells of a second new plate. In this case microplates were firstly centrifuged at 2255 g (Thermo Scientific CL31R) for 15 min and the supernatant was carefully decanted. Finally the pellet was exposed for 20 min to chloroform vapors lysing the cells. The pellet was then resuspended using 50 µL of PBS. 3.3. Host preparation and antibacterial assays After a culture of L. monocytogenes 5725 have grown respecting the conditions described in section 1, centrifugation was done at 4500 g during 15 min. The pellet was resuspended in Tris-HCl buffer (10 mM Tris, 150 mM NaCl, pH 8.0) and the suspension adjusted to OD620nm ≈ 1.0. Twenty µL of purified protein were mixed with 180 µL of bacterial suspension. Endolysin activity against permeabilized of L. monocytogenes 5725 cells (previously submitted to 20°C for 1 h) were also tested following the instructions already described. As positive control Lys68 endolysin was tested against P. aeruginosa PAO1 cells with exposed peptidoglycan. This substrate was prepared, using chloroform to remove outer cell membrane, following the instructions of Lavigne et al., (2004) [120]. 30 CHAPTER 2 MATERIALS AND METHODS Fig. 2 - 96-wells plate scheme of antibacterial assay against L. monocytogenes 5725 using Ply500 expressed in microscale conditions. Protein expression was tested for 24 and 48 h. Endolysin 68 was used as positive control against outer membrane permeabilzed of P. aeruginosa cells. Negative controls are present in dashed lines wells. Blue wells represents protein expression in 4mL tube; yellow wells the protein expression in micro-scale; green wells protein expression of 200 µL collected from 4 mL expression tube and pink wells represent the protein production in 1 mL collected from four wells. 4. Bioinformatic tools 4.1. In silico analysis of bacteriophage endolysins In order to identify putative domains within the Ply500 and Ply511 endolysins deposited in GenBank (http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/genbank), an in silico analysis of conducted using the HHpred webserver (toolkit.tuebingen.mpg.de/hhpred) and Pfam as a database. Enzymatic catalytic domain (ECD) and cell binding domain (CBD) found with an E-value higher than 1x10-5 with at least 80% of query coverage were considered as significant. 31 CHAPTER 2 MATERIALS AND METHODS Table 2 - Designed primers for endolysins sequences amplification. ply500 (primers 1 e 2) e ply511 (primers 3 e 4). Underlined are shown the restriction sites for enzymes BamHI and SalI. Melting temperatures also are present in this table. Primers Code Sequence Tm (˚C) 1 pHPL500Fw 5´AAAAAAGGATCCATGGCATTAACAGAG 3´ 68.4 ˚C 2 pHPL500Rv 5´AAAAAAGTCGACTTATTTTAAGAAGTATTCTTGCTG 3´ 67.8 ˚C 3 pHPL511Fw 5´ AAAAAAGGATCCATGGTAAAATATACCGTA 3’ 66.4 ˚C 4 pHPL511Rv 5´AAAAAAGTCGACTTATTTTTTGATAACTGC 3´ 65.2 ˚C 4.2. Primers design For the isolation and amplification of the endolysin sequences, primers in Table 2 were designed according to the insertion site of the pQE-30 plasmid. Calculation of melting temperatures and GC content were calculated using online software Tm Calculator from Thermo Scientific. Melting temperatures were calculated based on thermodynamic [121] and the salt concentration [122]. The formation of secondary structures (primer dimers, hairpins, self-dimers, hetero-dimers) was predicted using OligoAnalizer 3.1 (https://eu.idtdna.com/analyzer/Applications/OligoAnalyzer/). In order to avoid cutting of the ply500 and ply511 and obtain the correct cloning, the restriction map of that sequences were generated using online software NEBcutter: a program to cleave DNA with restriction enzymes [123] (http://tools.neb.com/NEBcutter2). BamHI and SalI were selected and the restriction sites were incorporated in primers sequences generating the correct homology regions. 5. Cloning This method involves the use of bacterial plasmid pQE30 as cloning vector in order to obtain many copies of genes of interest. The strategy consists in placing amplified endolysins genes by error-prone PCR and insert into the cloning vector previously opened up with restriction enzymes (NEB) BamHI and SalI. The same restriction enzymes are used to cleave the gene of interest generating stickyends that promote the ligation together on the plasmid using T4 DNA ligase enzyme (KAPA Biosystems). 32 CHAPTER 2 MATERIALS AND METHODS 5.1. Polymerase chain reaction (PCR) techniques 5.1.1. Error-prone PCR T4 DNA polymerase and primers used to amplify Listeria endolysins were purchased from KAPA Biosystems and Invitrogen, respectively. The conditions of polymerase chain reaction (PCR) (Bio Rad Mycycler Thermal Cycler) were modified in order to introduce random mutations into the endolysins sequences. The amplification of wild-type endolysins sequences was done using the primers present in table 2 and the ep-PCR procedure conditions are present in table 3. This conditions were modified following some instructions described by Pritchard et al., (2005) [124]. Once obtained, the amplified products were purified using the DNA Clean & Concentrator Kit TM-5 (Zymo Research Corporation). The correct lengths were confirmed by agarose gel. To promote the ligation between the generated sequences and the plasmid, restriction enzymes BamHI and SalI were used to create sticky ends on ep-PCR products. The generated digested sequences were newly purified and the concentrations calculated throughout spectrophotometric parameters of Nanodrop (Thermo Scientific Nanodrop 1000). 5.1.2. Colony-PCR This PCR-based technique is used to screen for plasmids containing a desired insert directly from bacterial colonies without the need of culturing or plasmid purification steps. The insert-specific primers, present in table 2, generate amplified and known length sequences which correspond to the correct and wild-type sequences. Colonies were picked from transformation plate, placed into 50 µL PCR tubes and resuspended in 10 µL sterile H2O. PCR reagents that compose the 50 µL reaction mixture, described in table 3, were added. Individual transformants were harvested in the initial heating step of PCR and cause the release of DNA plasmids and is used as template for amplification reaction. The correct amplified genes were confirmed by running agarose gel. 33 CHAPTER 2 MATERIALS AND METHODS Table 3 – PCR conditions for amplification of ply500 and ply511 endolysins sequences in ep-PCR and Colony-PCR. The volumes were calculated for 50 µL of final reaction volume. Error-Prone PCR Colony PCR ply500 ply511 Buffer A (x10) 5 µL 5 µL 5 µL DNTP’s (10 mM) 1 µL 1 µL 10 µL Primer FW (10 µM) 2 µL 2 µL 2 µL Primer RV (10 µM) 2 µL 2 µL 2 µL Template DNA 1 µL 2.5 µL 10 µL MgCl (25 mM) 11 µL 11 µL - MnCl (25 mM) 1 µL 1 µL - DNA Kapa Taq 1 µL 1 µL 0.2 µL H 0 Nuclease Free 26 µL 24.5 µL 29.8 µL 2 2 2 PCR conditions 5.2. 95°C – 3 min. 95°C – 3 min. 95°C – 30 s. 95°C – 1 min. 65°C – 30 s 25x 65°C – 1 min. 72°C – 2 min. 72°C – 3 min. 72°C – 2 min. 72°C – 2 min 30x Plasmid extraction and digestion Overnight culture of E. coli JM109 with CBD-P35 sequence present in pQE-30 vector was grown conditions previously described. Cell culture was then centrifuged at 9000 g during 3-4 minutes and medium decanted. Plasmid extraction was done using minipreps kit NucleoSpin Plasmid (MachereyNagel). Once extracted, plasmids were digested by using the two selected restriction enzymes (BamHI and SalI) during 2 h at 37˚C, removing the CBD-P35 sequence. The plasmid digestion was confirmed by running agarose gel and the correct band was then extracted by removing the correspond portion of the gel under UV light with sterile scalpel. In order to prevent the recirculation of cloning vector by removing the 5’-phosphate, Antarctic Phosphatase (NEB) was used following the manufacturer instructions - during 15 min at rT; the enzyme was inactivated by increasing temperature to 70°C for 5 min. 34 CHAPTER 2 MATERIALS AND METHODS 5.3. Ligation For the ligation step KAPA T4 ligase (KAPA Biosystems) was used to catalyze the ligation of errorprone PCR products with linearized cloning vector (section 5.2) with formation of a phosphodiester bond between 5’ phosphate and 3’ hydroxyl termini in duplex DNA. The required volumes of cloning vector for this step were calculated based on this equation below: 𝑛𝑔 𝑖𝑛𝑠𝑒𝑟𝑡 = 𝑖𝑛𝑠𝑒𝑟𝑡 (𝑘𝑏) × 50 𝑛𝑔 𝑣𝑒𝑐𝑡𝑜𝑟 × 5 𝑐𝑙𝑜𝑛𝑖𝑛𝑔 𝑣𝑒𝑐𝑡𝑜𝑟 (𝑘𝑏) According with the equation above, the volume of used amplified products depends on the lengths and on the ratio (1:5) between the two later, for 50 ng of vector used. 5.4. Agarose gel electrophoresis To confirm the correct lengths of amplified products 0.7% agarose gel were done achieving a better band separation and promote the correct band excision from the gel. Generally 1% agarose was used for the evaluation of correct ligation between amplified products and cloning vector. The agarose gels were prepared with Tris-Acetato-EDTA (TAE) (Biorad) 1x buffer and the electrophoresis performed at 90 V during 45 min. Samples were loaded with gel loading dye blue 6x (NEB) and 1kb (NEB) was used as ladder. SYBR Safe (Invitrogen) was used as DNA stain for visualization of DNA in agarose gel in ChemiDoc XRS (BioRad). 6. Transformation Transformation is a process in which foreign DNA is introduced into a cell. In some bacterial strains transformation occurs naturally, however most of them require artificial procedures to be in state of competence and accept exogenous DNA for a time limited response. In this work E. coli JM109 cells were used and adapted to be in state of competence – chemical and electro competent cells – and accept recombinant DNA plasmids through heat shock transformation and electroporation, respectively. All this procedures were based on described protocols in Current Protocols in Molecular Biology (2007) [125]. 35 CHAPTER 2 MATERIALS AND METHODS 6.1. Competent cells 6.1.1. Chemio-competent cells E. coli JM109 chemo competent cells were prepared based on previous described protocols. The first bacterial inoculum in LB medium, supplemented with 100 µg/mL of ampicillin, grew overnight at 37°C with 120 rpm agitation (Environmental Shaker incubator ES- 20/60), the next day, a 1:100 dilution of the first inoculum was done into fresh LB medium until the bacterial growth reach exponential phase (OD620nm≈0.3) maintaining the same conditions. The culture should be centrifuged at 3300 g, 4°C (Sigma 3-16k) during 10 min and decant the supernatant. The pellet was resuspended with ice-cold 0.1 M CaCl2 solution in half of the volume used in the dilution step and store in ice during 30 minutes and then centrifuged following the same conditions described in first centrifugation step. In this step, competent pellet is much cloudier and there is a hole in the pellet which indicates already good competent cells. Resuspend the pellet again with the same ice-cold CaCl2 solution in the 1/10 of the volume used in dilution step. Then, another centrifugation step is needed in the same conditions above. The final pellet is resuspended in aliquots of 1mL of ice-cold 0.1M CaCl2 and stored at -80°C. 6.1.2. Electrocompetent cells To produce electrocompetent cells a inoculum of one colony from a fresh plate of the strain E. coli JM109 was done in LB broth and incubate at 37°C, 120 rpm, overnight. Dilution of 1/100 from initial culture in fresh LB medium and incubate at the same conditions above described until the culture reach OD600nm≈0.5. The culture was then kept on ice for 15 min before the centrifugation step at 5000 g at 4°C (Sigma 3-16k) during 10 min and the pellet was resuspended in ice-cold and sterile glycerol 10% solution. This step was repeated three times with decreasing volumes of glycerol 10% solution. All the procedure was done in ice to prevent thermal shock and increase the efficiency of competent cells. The final aliquots (100-200 µL of final volume) were stored at -80°C. 6.2. Transformation and plasmid replication 6.2.1. Heat-shock transformation In this transformation method 100 µL aliquots of chemi-competent cells were withdrawn from -80°C, after thaw the cells were mixed with 50 ng of DNA and incubated on ice for 30 min. The heat shock was done during 40 seconds using a 42°C water bath. After heat shock the cells were placed in ice for 2 min, then resuspended in 300 µL of SOC broth and incubated at 37°C with 120 rpm agitation 36 CHAPTER 2 MATERIALS AND METHODS about 1 h for recovery and cellular growth. Cells were then plated (100 µL and pellet after centrifugation) in LB plates with ampicillin (100 µg/mL) and incubated overnight at 37°C. 6.2.2. Electroporation Electroporation was performed using Gene Pulser XcellTM (Bio-Rad) with 0.1cm ice-cold cuvettes at 1.8kV. 50 µL of chemi-competent cells and 0.5 to 2 µL of DNA were mix into the cuvettes. After electric pulse the cuvette were removed, supplemented with 1 mL of super optimal broth (SOC) and incubated at 37°C with 120 rpm agitation for 1 hour for recovery and cellular growth. The cells were plated (100 µL and pellet after centrifugation) using LB plates with ampicillin. 7. Direct evolution screening assay This methodology allows one to utilize directed evolution to increase the bacteriolytic activity of translated endolysins at low temperatures and in the presence at high salt conditions. Random mutations introduced through the use of an error-prone DNA polymerase generate mutant libraries that are submitted to an extensive screening procedure used to identify possible best bacteriolytic mutants compared to wild-type molecules in the same conditions. This procedure must be performed until the desired properties are obtained. 7.1. Mutant libraries The first step consists in the generation of the mutant libraries throughout the incorporation of random mutations in wild-type endolysins sequences using error-prone PCR technique which was previously described in section 5.1.1. The modified endolysins sequences generated were cloned and transformed as previously described in sections 5 and 6. Additionally, original sequences followed the same protocol and used as positive controls of transformation step and during the screening tests. 7.2. Screening tests The second step, called screening, selects the best adapted colonies in very specific conditions. Two conditions were tested in this step, low temperatures and high salt concentrations. 37 CHAPTER 2 MATERIALS AND METHODS For protein production the plated colonies were carefully selected from agar plates with sterilized toothpick and inoculated in the designated well of the 96-wells. The protein production and cell lysis were carried in the same conditions as described in section 3.2 using 24 h for protein expression. Original plate, containing toothpicked mutant colonies, was conserved at -20°C in order to recover potential candidates and repeat the mutation step until desire properties were obtained. AmpR AmpR AmpR AmpR Fig. 3 – Directed evolution assay. Wild-type ply500 and ply511 endolysins sequences are used for error-prone PCR (1) generating library mutants containing random nucleotide mutations. Mutated gene sequences are cloned into expression vector pQE-30 and transformed into E. coli JM109 competent cells (2). Individual colonies are inoculated into their own specific well of a 96-wells plate. Through an extensive screening process the constructs, individual mutants that are catalytically active after incubation at low temperatures and at high salt conditions are selected and classified as mutants with enhanced kinetic stability (3). This process must be repeated until desired properties are obtained (4). 7.2.1. Low temperature tests In this test L. monocytogenes 5725 cells were prepared according to 3.3 section by transferring 180 µL of bacterial suspension, previously adjusted to OD620nm ≈ 1.0 with PBS to each well previously filled with 20 µL of protein. The microplate was immediately placed in the microplate spectrophotometer previously refrigerated at 4°C and the enzyme kinetics were monitored by measuring the OD620nm every 5 minutes for 30 minutes. 38 CHAPTER 2 MATERIALS AND METHODS 7.2.2. High salt conditions This screening test only differs in the preparation of the Listeria strain compared to the previous by resuspending the pellets in 10 mM Tris, 150 mM NaCl, pH 8.0 buffer the bacterial and adjust OD620nm ≈1. 8. Cryodrilling An alternative strategy to increase endolysin enzymatic activity is by using phages as a mutagenesis promoter. This strategy is based on phage adaptability to different environmental conditions. The assay called Cryodrilling consists in the propagation of the phage to successive lower temperatures (two degrees below the previous temperature). The hypothesis is that by adapting phage to lower temperatures the endolysin encoded in its genome will also be modified, and be consequently more active. Listeria phage P100 and L. monocytogenes 5725 host were used in this new evolution strategy. Table 4 – Used primers for amplification of the PlyP100 endolysins derived from phage adapted assays. This primers were already available in the group primers collection. Underlined are shown the restriction sites for enzymes NcoI and BamHI, respectively. Primers Code Sequence Tm (˚C) 1 plyP100_Fw 5' TATATACCATGGTAAAATATACCGTAGAGAACA 3' 56.9 ˚C 2 plyP100_Rv 5' TATATACCTAGGTTATTTTTTGATAACTGCTCCTG 3' 58.6 ˚C This assay was divided in two different approaches: in the first approach, called evolution, only the Listeria phage P100 was allowed to evolve and the bacterial genotype was held constant; on the second approach, called co-evolution, both phage and host were allowed to evolve. Initial L. monocytogenes 5725 culture growth in 10 mL of fresh TSB medium until reach the OD620nm≈0.3. The host culture was then infected with 107 Listeria phage P100 particles. Cultures were propagated by serial transfers every 48 h in a static incubator. Each culture transfer was done decreasing the initial temperature (25°C) two degrees until reach the final temperature of 7°C. Transfers of the evolving populations involved isolating phage particles by centrifuging at 9000 g for 10 minutes and filter (0.22 µm pore membrane). Transferring 1 mL of phage suspension into fresh wild-type grown previously. In co-evolved populations the transfer was done by inoculating 10% of volume of each previous suspension in fresh TSB broth. 39 CHAPTER 2 MATERIALS AND METHODS To confirm the phage presence in every two transfers, phage population was estimated by plating dilutions of each phage population on to TSB agar plates with a semi-solid overlay bacterial lawn. At 7 °C, different phage plaques were found in evolved and co-evolved populations and isolated. The new adapted phage production was done as described in section 2.3. Table 5 – PCR conditions for amplification of plyP100 from phage adapted endolysins. The volumes were calculated for 30 µL of final reaction volume. The initialization step at 95°C during 10 minutes was used in order to promote the release of phage DNA. PCR plyP100 Buffer A (x10) 5 µL dNTPs (10 mM) 0.75 µL DNA template 2 µL KAPA Taq Pol. HF 0.5 µL Primer Fw (10 µM) 0.75 µL Primer Rv (10 µM) 0.75 µL H 0 nuclease free 15.15 µL 2 95°C – 10 min. 95°C – 3 min. PCR conditions 65°C – 1 min. 30x 72°C – 3 min. 72°C – 2 min. Before sequencing the plyP100 of adapted phages was amplified by PCR using specific primers (Table 4) and following the conditions present in Table 5. Correct amplification was confirmed by agarose gel and PCR- products were then purified. Thereafter the amplified sequences, containing separately each primer, were submitted for sequencing 40 Chapter 3 Results and Discussion CHAPTER 3 RESULTS AND DISCUSSION 1. Background Listeriosis is a foodborne disease that has become widespread in recent years. In order to avoid the inappropriate usage of antibiotics which can lead to an increase antibiotic resistance bacteria and due to the limitations of phage usage, phage endolysins are appointed as a good alternative as biocontrol agents [37]. However, little is known about the enzymatic activity under food processing and storage conditions, such as refrigeration temperatures, high salts and low pH conditions. In order to that it becomes important to verify endolysins stability in food matrices as well as in consumer safety. The basis of this study was to improve structural stability and lytic properties of endolysins by using specific directed evolution techniques such as ep-PCR. Directed evolution is defined as a method to harness natural selection in order to engineer proteins to acquire particular properties that are not associated with the protein in nature. The main advantage of using directed evolution instead of more rational-based approaches for molecular engineering relates to the volume and diversity of variants that can be screened [116]. The first approach consisted in some attempts to isolation of derived listerial phage endolysins for further characterization and subsequent lytic improvements. Based on the non-successful phage isolation approach, a second strategy was followed using two well-known derived L. monocytogenes phage endolysins, Ply500 and Ply511. Some attempts to improve lytic properties of this two proteins were performed namely by the introduction of random mutations through the use of ep-PCR. At the same time an alternatively strategy based on biotic interactions between phage and host was developed in order to promote the phage adaptation at low refrigeration temperatures and generating improved lysins. According to the Red Queen hypothesis the adaptation of the host generates counter adaptation in phages, increasing the population fitness and lead to an evolution of phage particles. 2. Listeria phage isolation Despite they have a conserved biological function, phage endolysins are greatly enzymatically and architecturally diverse comprehending 89 different types of organizational architecture and are able to infect 64 different bacterial genera [126]. However, the tremendously variety and complexity of PG composition with more than 100 chemotypes has led to an evolutionary pressure which has forced phages to refine their lytic activity over host cell wall. As a result, phages have acquired a 45 CHAPTER 3 RESULTS AND DISCUSSION huge diversity of PG hydrolases which may vary in type, number and organization of binding and catalytic domains [126]. In order to obtain listerial phages and consequently isolate and characterize their derived endolysins, various isolation attempts were performed using four different effluents from different livestock industries. Although no phages were isolated from any effluent sample, the presence of prophage activity during non-lysogenic strains selection was verified by formation of inhibition halos of L. monocytogenes strain Scott A against L. monocytogenes CECT 934 lawn. It is known that L. monocytogenes strain Scott A has been extensively used in as a reference strain in for efficacy testing of food processing and preservation techniques [127]. Also this strain encodes temperate phage PSA that can justify the presence of inhibition halos in bacterial lawn [128][28]. This listeriophage integrates in the 3' end of an arginine tRNA gene and when isolated using UVinduction it is characterized by exclusively infect L. monocytogenes serovar 4b strains [129]. 3. In silico analysis of bacteriophage endolysins Since no phages were isolated it was needed to use two well-known endolysins. Ply500 and Ply511 possess modular structure with cell binding (N-terminal) and catalytic (C-terminal) domains. To identify putative domains of this endolysins with sequences deposited in NCBI, an in silico analysis was performed using Pfam database with an E-value higher than 1x10-5 with at least 80% of query coverage. The results for putative domains for each endolysin are showed in table 1. The most similar enzymatic catalytic domain for the derived Listeria phage A500 endolysin Ply500 is VANY (Table 1). This domain is described in Pfam database as a carboxypeptidase, responsible for cleavage of C-terminal residues of D-alanyl-D-alanine in PG possibly due to antibiotic resistance provided by VanY protein on some Enterococcus strains. VANY domain was identified in endolysins derived from Gram-positive or Gram-negative phages mainly in Listeria, Bacillus and Escherichia cells. However, in contradiction with Pfam, Listeria phage endolysin Ply500 is classified as a carboxypeptidase, cleaving L-alanyl-D-glutamate endopeptidases [25]. Despite that the probability percentages in Table 1 for the putative binding domains of Ply500 are lower than initially defined query coverage value, it is known that family domain SH3 is commonly found in phage endolysins and SH3_3 is referred as one of the most common domain type. Pfam database refers to the SH3 family domain as the responsible for peptide binding that can be found in proteins that interact with other proteins. Other SH3 related domains are appointed as very 46 CHAPTER 3 RESULTS AND DISCUSSION commonly found in Listeria phage A500 derived endolysins [1]. This binding domain has been identified for the recognition of pentaglycine cross bridge in PG which is present in Gram-positive bacteria. Table 1 – Putative binding and catalytic domains for Ply500 and Ply511 endolysins. Ply500 endolysin putative domains Catalytic domain Conserved domains HHpred Probability (%) HHpred E-value VANY PF02557 99.9 2.3E-22 Peptidase_M15_4 PF13539 99.5 2.8E-15 Peptidase_M15 PF01427 99.5 1.6E-14 Peptidase_M15_3 PF08291 98.0 1.2E-05 Peptidase_M15_2 PF05951 98.0 2E-05 SH3_4 PF06347 72.8 1 SH3_3 PF08239 69.7 1.4 Binding domain Ply511 endolysin putative domains Amidase_2 PF01510 99.9 3.4E-24 PF12200 81.6 0.43 Binding domain DUF3597 For the Ply511 endolysin, the most putative catalytic domain after in silico analysis is the Amidase_2 with 99.9% of probability and 3.4E-24 of E-value. This domain is characterized by Pfam database as an amidase responsible for the cleavage reaction of the bond between N-acetylmuramoyl residues and L-amino acid residues in bacterial cell walls. Amidase_2 is usually located as the central domain [25]. The most putative binding domain for this protein is the Domain of Unknown Function (DUF) 597 with 81.6% query coverage and 0.43 E-value. Although this domain has no characterized function it is located at C-terminal and it is supposed to play an important rule as cell binding domain. It is also known that most listerial phage endolysins, including Ply511, do not directly require wall teichoic acid as the binding ligand [130]. In this aspect it was found out that the removal of C-terminal CBD does not affect the attachment of Ply511 endolysin to L. monocytogenes cells PG [131]. Therefore, a modular architecture (i.e. the presence of CBD) is not always necessary for enzyme activity. 47 CHAPTER 3 RESULTS AND DISCUSSION 4. Protein expression preliminary test 4.1. Large-scale protein production The ply511 and ply500 sequences encodes two different proteins with distinct molecular weight – 36.48 kDa and 33.43 kDa, respectively. In order to evaluate the correct expression of this two proteins, culture of 250 mL of E. coli JM109 cells, containing cloned plasmid with wild-type protein sequences, were done and induced as described in section 3.1 of Materials and Methods. The final soluble protein concentrations of 315 µM and 106 µM respectively, are in agreement with figures 1A and 1B. The same Figures shows a protein overexpression and also that the majority of interesting proteins are present in elution of fraction 2 (F2). A residual concentration of unspecified soluble proteins is visible too and still present in a lower concentration. These results indicate that the expression system was working correctly and producing folded proteins. The use of L. monocytogenes 5725 was considered after preliminary antibacterial assays (results not showed) as described in section 3.3 of Materials and Methods. The lytic activity of the two produced proteins were tested against five different L. monocytogenes strains – 5725, 934, 936, 911, 923, 5875 – with the last four belonging to furthermost common serovars reported in the most human listeriosis cases, 1/2b, 1/2c, 4b and 1/2a, respectively [132]. Fig. 1 – SDS- PAGE electrophoresis gel 12%, stained with Coomassie Blue, for Ply511 (A) and Ply500 (B) proteins. M, Protein Ladder (10-250 kDa) from NEB; F1, 2, 3, and 4, fractions 1, 2, 3 and 4 of eluted proteins; W, wash; FT, flow through. The proteins were eluted with elution buffer containing 250 mM imidazole concentration. 4.2. Micro-scale protein expression and preliminary tests The use of ep-PCR as the method of directed evolution generates a higher number of protein variants or potentially mutants that can be screened. Therefore an optimized process is needed in order to 48 CHAPTER 3 RESULTS AND DISCUSSION select the best candidates. Thus, the use of a 96-wells plate becomes absolutely necessary for the realization of this procedure wherein each well will contain individually different candidates. As result, a lower volume (200 µL broth) for cell culture is required – here called micro-scale protein 0,8 0,8 0,7 0,7 0,6 0,6 0,5 0,5 OD (620nm) OD (620nm) expression. 0,4 0,3 0,4 0,3 0,2 0,2 0,1 0,1 A 0,00 0,08 0,17 0,25 0,33 0,42 0,50 0,00 0,08 0,17 0,25 0,33 0,42 0,50 Control 24h frozen 48h frozen Time (h) B 0 0 Control 24h frozen 48h frozen 24h Normal 48h Normal 0,8 TIme (h) 24h Normal 48h Normal 0,8 0,7 0,7 0,6 OD (620nm) 0,6 OD (620nm) 0,5 0,5 0,4 0,4 0,3 0,3 0,2 0,2 0,1 C 0 0,1 D 0 0,00 0,08 0,17 0,25 0,33 0,42 0,50 0,00 0,08 0,17 Time (h) 0,33 0,42 0,50 Time (h) Control 24h Normal 24h frozen 48h Normal 48h frozen 0,25 Control 24h frozen 48h frozen 24h Normal 48h Normal Fig. 2 - Antibacterial assays of Ply500 endolysin against normal and permeabilized L. monocytogenes 5725 cells. The endolysins were expressed in 4 mL broth and cell lysis was done by sonication (A). Protein expression was done in 5 wells (200 µL each well) then joined (1 mL) and sonicated (B). Endolysins were expressed in 200 µL of a 96-wells plate (C). Also protein expression was induced in 4 mL broth (D). Next 200 µL were transferred to 96-wells. Cell lysis was done by chloroform vapors. In all the cases the expression conditions were 16°C during 24 h or 48 h with 1.5 mM IPTG concentration. E. coli JM109 wild-type was used as negative control. As already shown in section 3.1, the protein is overexpressed in large-scale conditions. In a first approach, the same conditions of protein production (0.5 mM IPTG, 200 rpm agitation, overnight) were maintained for micro-scale protein expression as well as the use of repeated frozen-thawing 49 CHAPTER 3 RESULTS AND DISCUSSION cycles for cell lysis. However, after performing antibacterial assays against L. monocytogenes 5725 no enzymatic activity was detected suggesting that the protein would not be produced in considerable concentrations. The lower volumes in each filled well generates a higher friction which may negatively influence the agitation conditions as well as IPTG concentration and consequently the incubation time. Efficiency of the repeated frozen-thawing cycles as cell lysis method was also identified as the one of the most possible sources for the lack of antibacterial reduction. Besides, the absence of lytic activity may be related to the difficult attachment of proteins in PG layer. As result, the main objective of this very important preliminary test mainly consisted in evaluate the sources for the lack of lytic activity and improve those conditions before proceeding to generate mutant library and screening steps. To improve protein expression in micro-scale a higher agitation (250 rpm) and inducer concentration (1.5 mM IPTG) were tested. Two different lysis methods (sonication and chloroform vapors), incubation times (24 and 48 h) and lytic activity of proteins against normal and permeabilized (previously frozen at -20°C for 1 h) Listeria cells were also evaluated. The most immediate conclusion of the results present in Figure 2 is the more effectiveness lytic activity of Ply500 in permeabilized Listeria cells, 24 h after the addiction of IPTG. Once permeabilized, endolysins can easily bind to its specific sites of PG causing a better cell lysis. These results contrasts with the lower lytic activity observed in normal listerial cells. In 4 mL protein expression (Fig. 2A) a better lytic activity is visible, however, turns out to be normal since that a higher protein concentration is produced too, especially when comparing to the other conditions. Another conclusion is that using 250 rpm agitation instead the initially used (200 rpm) the problem between broth volume and agitation conditions was solved which can be confirmed by lytic activity in micro-scale expression which is considerably significant (Fig. 2C). No enzyme activity was detected in Figure 2D suggesting problems during cell growth or protein production. The bacterial reduction in the all conditions presented in Figure 2B is very similar to those observed in Figures 2A and 2C. The slight difference observed may be due to the possible variations in cell growth and efficiency of cell lysis. Although the efficiency of cell lysis methods is very similar, the chloroform vapor method seems to be more adapted for this work once that promotes cell lysis equally in all wells of 96-wells plate which is corroborated by the significantly lytic activity showed in Figure 2C. 50 CHAPTER 3 RESULTS AND DISCUSSION 4.3. Lytic activity – Low temperatures vs. Room temperatures Despite the fact that these endolysins reveal good stability and lytic activity in a wide range of higher temperatures, they have not yet been well characterized at low temperatures [133]. Once determined the optimal protein expression conditions in micro-scale, the enzymatic activity of wild type endolysins at food storage temperatures (≈4°C) and at room temperatures (≈25°C) was compared by performing antibacterial assays against L. monocytogenes 5725. The importance of this test was to prove the lower lytic activity of natural Ply500 and Ply511 and the need to improve its properties in food storage conditions. The reduction of antibacterial activity present in Figure 3 suggests a very similar enzymatic behavior in the two different conditions. Nevertheless, Ply500 shows better lytic activity in both cases with a two log reduction in thirty minutes whereas the Ply511 did not show significant activity in either 1 0,9 0,8 0,7 0,6 0,5 0,4 0,3 0,2 0,1 0 1 0,9 0,8 0,7 0,6 0,5 0,4 0,3 0,2 0,1 0 OD (620nm) OD (620nm) conditions. A B 0,00 0,08 0,17 0,25 0,33 0,42 0,50 0,00 0,08 0,17 0,25 0,33 0,42 0,50 Time (h) Time (h) ply500 ply511 Control ply500 ply511 Control Fig. 3– Kinetics of antibacterial assays of Listeria phage endolysins Ply500 and Ply511 at refrigeration temperatures (A) and room temperatures (B). Negative control was done using 180 µL bacterial suspension mixed with 20 µL of PBS. The connection factor with these results could be related to the L. monocytogenes 5725 strain which belongs to serovar 4c. This serovar is included into the non-most common listerial strains detected in foods and is rarely reported to be implicated in human listeriosis cases [134]. However, Ply500 and Ply511 CBDs are referred to promote a very strong and weak binding for the PG, respectively, to this listerial serovar, which can suggest the difference of lytic activity [135]. Despite the difference of lytic activity between the two endolysins, these results are not considered relevant since a high bacterial concentration is still present. As a result the improvement of the 51 CHAPTER 3 RESULTS AND DISCUSSION catalytic activity in specific food storage conditions is required in order to be liable applied in food processing industry. The optimization mainly consists using two different approaches of directed evolution – random mutagenesis by ep-PCR and phage-based adaptation mechanisms. 5. Cloning 5.1. Gene amplification For the improvement of lytic activity of Ply500 and Ply511 endolysins a PCR-based technique, epPCR, was used as first approach. Besides, this technique promotes the insertion of random point mutations in unknown sequences by imposing imperfect and mutagenic reaction conditions. The mutated sequences can generate modified proteins with improved lytic properties at specific conditions of food storage. Before proceeding to the gene amplification an initial PCR optimization was done in order to determine the annealing temperatures of designed primers. Fig. 4. – PCR of amplified protein genes using temperature gradient between 55-65°C. Gradient temperatures used for endolysins sequences amplification – from left to right: 55°C, 57°C, 60°C, 62°C, 65°C. Agarose gel 1% concentration, stained with Sybr Safe and run at 90 V. Legend: M – DNA 1 kb ladder. Due to the use of KAPA Taq DNA polymerase the annealing temperatures of designed primers are about 5°C lower than the initially calculated melting temperatures. A temperature gradient between 55-65°C was used to perform a traditional PCR to determine and optimize the annealing temperatures of primers. Genes were amplified over the entire temperature gradient (Fig. 4) and the annealing temperature chosen was 65°C. 52 CHAPTER 3 RESULTS AND DISCUSSION The ep-PCR was performed amplifying the sequences using the conditions and the primers described in 5.1.1 and 4.2 sections of Materials and Methods. The generated products are present in Figure 4.2 which shows a good amplification step. The visualized bands correspond to the expected lengths with a 1020 bp for plyP500 and 1176 bp for plyP511. The generated products were purified for further utilization in ligation step. M Fig. 5 – Amplified endolysins sequences by ep-PCR. The generated products possess 1020 bp (plyP500) and 1176 bp (plyP511) and were then double digested by using selected restriction enzymes and purified. Agarose gel 1% concentration, stained with Sybr Safe and run at 90 V. Legend: M – 1 kb ladder. Some optimizations were done in ep-PCR experiments. These alterations mainly consisted in altering some steps. Addiction of fresh KAPA Taq DNA polymerase after fifteenth amplification cycles for better amplification of the sequences. Also increasing and decreasing the number of cycles and variation of the initial template concentration between 3-50 ng/µL were done in order to increase the error rate [136][137]. According to the mostly used conditions in this experiments (20 cycles and 50 ng/µL of template DNA), 11 to 21 mutations rate were expected for each template lenght. Furthermore, the increase of multiple mutations leads to a high number of different enzymes that can be screened. However when the mutation rate required is too high, the resulting proteins will carry multiple amino acid changes and could therefore be inactive [136]. 53 CHAPTER 3 RESULTS AND DISCUSSION 5.2. Plasmid linearization and ligation Before ligation step, cloning vector pQE-30 was digested using BamHI and SalI restriction enzymes, according to the section 5.2 of Materials and Methods. The digestion resulted linearized plasmid (3461 bps) and other bands that may corresponds to CBD-P35 sequence with 1187 bp length (Fig. 6) M Fig. 6 – Double digestion of pQE-30 cloning vector in agarose gel 0.7% concentration in order to promote better separation of digested plasmid The gel was stained with Sybr Safe and run at 90 V. Legend: M – DNA 1 kb ladder. After linearization the plasmid was extracted from agarose gel, purified and the recirculation prevented by using Antarctic Phosphatase. The resulting ep-PCR amplified genes (Fig. 5) were cloned using T4 DNA ligase following the instructions described in section 5.3 of Materials and Methods. The lengths of generated cloned fragments are 4039 bps for ply500 gene (Fig. 7A) and 4465 bps for ply511 gene (Fig. 7B). 5.3. Transformation After ligation step, the cloned vectors were initially transformed by chemical transformation (described in section 6.2.1 of Materials and Methods) on NZY5α E. coli competent cells (nzytech) and later on E. coli JM109 chemo-competent (preparation described in section 6.2.2 of Materials and Methods). 54 CHAPTER 3 RESULTS AND DISCUSSION Fig. 7 – Representative illustration pQE-30 vector cloned with ply500 (A) and ply511 (B) using Vector NTI software. The ligation generates two plasmids with different lengths – 4039 bps and 4465 bps, respectively. Both genes are cloned between BamHI and SalI restriction sites. In spite of the lower yield of generated colonies, the efficiency of transformation was evaluated by colony-PCR (section 5.1.2. of Materials and Methods). The transformation efficiency using NZY5α E.coli chemiocompetent cells was low with only two successful colonies transformed with pQE-30-plyP500 in contrast with no transformed colonies in case of cloned plyP511 (Fig. 8). Successful directed evolution experiments are the integrated results of efficient library construction followed by a robust high-through-put screening [138]. The lower rate of successful transformed colonies obtained discarded the chemical transformation procedure. In order to increase the yield of transformed colonies, electroporation (Materials and Methods, section 6.2.2) was done as it is described as an extremely high efficiency procedure for E. coli transformation [139]. However, NZY5α E. coli cells are only chemically competent preventing its usage for transformation by electroporation. Therefore, the use of E. coli JM109 electrocompetent cells (Materials and Methods, section 6.1.2) for electroporation was required. Despite being considered a highly efficient transformation method no colonies were obtained. Severall attempts have been made to overcome this problem. The plasmid extraction, ligation and cloning steps were newly performed as well as newly electrocompetent cells were done however with no practical results. 55 CHAPTER 3 RESULTS AND DISCUSSION Fig. 8 – Colony-PCR results after “heat-shock” transformation using NZY5α E. coli competent cells. Only pQE-30 + ply500 ligation were assembled by competent cells. Agarose gel 1% concentration, stained with Sybr Safe run 90 V. Legend: M – DNA 1 kb ladder. It is known that high salt concentration influences the electric conductivity, causing loss of cells viability. In order that different volumes of ligation were also tested however the problem persisted. The absence of colonies can also be related to the residual presence of manganese ions. This ions, resulted from ep-PCR, can negatively affect the enzymatic digestion of amplified products and the activity of T4 DNA ligase during ligation step [138]. Original pQE-30 vector containing original sequences of ply500 and ply511 and pUC19 cloning vector were unsuccessfully tested as positive control, by transformation into E. coli JM109 electrocompetent cells. Wherefore the extensive reutilization of electroporation cuvettes may lead to the accumulation of aluminum oxide that can change the electric parameters of electroporator and negatively influence the efficiency of transformation. 6. Cryodrilling Another strategy to improve lytic properties of endolysins is based on biotic interactions influenced by environment conditions. This interactions between hosts and parasites, such as phages-host interaction, impose adaptation and counter-adaptation that results in rapid antagonistic coevolution and population dynamics [67]. A different approach for the improvement of endolysin enzymatic activity is by adapting phage to successive lower temperatures which acts as mutagenesis promoter. The hypothesis is that by 56 CHAPTER 3 RESULTS AND DISCUSSION adapting phage to lower temperatures the endolysin encoded in its genome will also be modified, and be consequently more active at lower temperatures. The well characterized Listeria phage P100, known to be able to infect and kill a broad host range of L. monocytogenes strains, and L. monocytogenes 5725 host cells was used in this new evolution strategy [140]. This assay was divided in two different strategies. The first approach, called evolution, only the Listeria phage P100 was allowed to evolve and the bacterial genotype was held constant. The second approach, called co-evolution, both phage and host were allowed to evolve. Fig. 9 – PCR of amplified endolysins sequences derived from co-evolved (wells 1-5) and evolved (wells 6-10) adapted phages. Amplified products were visualized by 1% agarose gel, stained with Syber Safe, at 90 V. The marker (M) is 1 kb ladder. Culture transfers were done decreasing the initial temperature (25°C) two degrees until reach the final temperature of 7°C (section 8 of Materials and Methods). Due to the biotic interactions between phage and host under decreasing temperatures it was expected that different adapted phages were generated. Therefore, at 7 °C, 5 phage plaques with presumable different evolutionary adaptations were found in evolved and co-evolved populations and then isolated. The specific primers for plyP100, already available in primers group collection, were used for amplification of the endolysins sequences of newly adapted phages (Fig. 9) which were then purified. Once amplified and purified, the plyP100 from isolated co-evolutionary and evolutionary phage plaques were sequenced, aligned and compared to the original plyP100. 57 CHAPTER 3 RESULTS AND DISCUSSION Table 3 – Sequencing results of amplified plyP100 sequences of the 5 different phage plaques isolated from Co-Evolution (CE) and Evolution (E) populations. Amplified sequences were aligned and compared to the original plyP100. Point mutations are observable at specific positions of the amplified sequences lenghts. Legend: A – adenine, T – thymine, G – guanine, C – cytosine, * – absence of nucleotide. Sequence position (kb) CE1 Original Fw Rv CE2 Original Fw Rv CE3 Original Fw Rv CE4 Original Fw Rv CE5 Original Fw Rv E1 Original Fw Rv E32 Original Fw Rv E3 Original Fw Rv E4 Original Fw Rv E5 Original Fw Rv 58 882 A G A 52 A C A 846 A C A 846 A C A 95 * A * 112 * T * 42 A C A 65 G * 99 C T C 111 * T * 65 * G * 998 C C G 941 A * A 96 * G * 981 A C A 44 C T C 73 * T * 846 A C A 955 A A * 956 * * A 109 * T * 961 * * C 117 * G * 970 * * C 994 * * A 72 * T * 73 * T * 81 * T * 846 A C A 941 A * A 956 * * A 925 A A * 933 A * A 944 A * A 958 A A * CHAPTER 3 RESULTS AND DISCUSSION Sequencing results, compiled and presented in Table 3, show at first sight, some point mutations in the plyP100 sequences derived from co-evolved and evolved phage populations. However, the high length of plyP100 turns it difficult to sequence and the available primers were used for sequencing of mutated endolysins sequences from adapted phages. Besides, it is known that the optimal length for sequencing is about 700 bp which decreases the reliability of the point mutations present. The forward primer provides reliable sequencing results in the first 700 bps which contrasts with the remaining sequence generating undefined peaks and denoting sequencing errors. Nevertheless, this sequencing errors can be quickly detected once using the same theory applied to reverse primer. The same but reverse argument may also be applied. Fig. 10 – Example of sequencing chromatogram of adapted plyP100 endolysin derived from co-evolutionary adapted phage. The putative mutations are highlighted. PlyP100CE1_Fw and PlyP100CE_Rv are the primers used for gene sequencing. The non-conclusive sequencing results are showed in the chromatogram example of Figure 5.2. Despite the highlighted putative mutations are present in amplified sequences using plyP100CE_Rv primer compared to the original sequence, the chromatogram shows undefined peaks for each mutation. These observations contrasts with no mutations for the sequence amplified using the plyP100_Fw primer which presents well defined peaks. For future better amplification and sequencing, the primers must be redesigned and optimized in order to pair with homology zone in phage genome instead of pairing with plyP100 gene as was the case. 59 Chapter 4 Conclusions and future perspectives CHAPTER 4 CONCLUSIONS AND FUTURE PERSPECTIVES 1. Conclusions and future perspectives The main goal of this work was to improve lytic properties of phage derived endolysins against foodborne pathogen L. monocytogenes in specific food storage and processing conditions. Due to the lack of knowledge of endolysins sequences and which type of mutation can improve its lytic activity represented the most scientific challenge of this study. As result two different approaches of directed evolution were performed to overcome this problem – ep-PCR and cryodrilling. Concerning the first stage of this study – phage isolation – no listerial phage was identified in all used effluents and only the presence of one prophage was detected. This prophage is within L. monocytogenes strain scott A genome and when excised it is known to act on other listerial strains with 4b serovar. Future experiments can be focused on its excision and consequently improvement of lytic properties. In silico analysis of the Ply500 and Ply511 endolysins revealed a modular structure for both proteins. However, as can be observed in Ply511 endolysin which possess a central catalytic domain, the modular structure (i.e. the presence of CBD) is not always necessary for the lytic activity of the protein. As the function of CBD domain of Ply511 is not known, interesting future approaches may involve whether its presence or not influences potential improvements of lytic properties of lysins against a wide range of listerial serovars. Another possible approach may be related to the modification of endolysin binding domain. Through the use of specifically designed primers, the proteins sequences would successively be shortened and an increase or decrease of catalytic properties can be evaluated. Preliminary antimicrobial assays using wild-type proteins revealed lower catalytic activity at storage (refrigeration) temperatures emphasizing the need to improve those properties. Moreover, several limitations (absence of refrigerated spectrophometer) to keep these temperatures constant were shown, decreasing the reproducibility of these antibacterial assays. Consequently, further screenings at low temperatures has yet to be extensively optimized. The first approach for endolysins lytic improvement – ep-PCR – revealed several limitations during cloning and transformation steps which did not allowed the fulfillment of the screening stage. Furthermore, this was a very time-consuming methodology with several interrelated steps. Future experiments to generate improved catalytic properties of this protein should use alternative techniques. Site-saturating mutagenesis (SSM) technique is more efficient and eliminates time-consuming subcloning ligation. 63 CHAPTER 4 CONCLUSIONS AND FUTURE PERSPECTIVES Regarding the second approach for endolysins improvements – cryodrilling – a few point mutations in PlyP100 sequence of coevolutionary and evolutionary phage populations were achieved. Moreover this strategy was less problematical than the first approach. However, there is no confirmation that mutations improve lytic activity of phage derived endolysins and therefore no conclusion can be retrieved about efficiency between coevolutionary and evolutionary phage populations. Further improvements for future works related to phage adaptation mainly involves the increasing of adaptation time at refrigeration temperatures in order to promote higher genetic diversity and consequently increasing the probabilities of isolation of well adapted endolysins. 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Regul Toxicol Pharmacol 2005, 43:301–12. 72 Anexe A – SDS-PAGE gel composition Table A1 - Components and volumes used for SDS-PAGE gels preparation. The present volumes were used for preparation of four gels. Stacking Gel Separating Gel 3,75% 12% 2 mL 10mL Tris-HCl 0,5M pH 6,8 4 mL - Tris-HCl 1,5M pH 8,8 - 3 mL 9 mL 9,6 mL SDS 10% 160 µL 240 µL TEMED 12 µL 12 µL PSA 10% 800 µL 1,2 mL Acrylamide-Bisacrylamide (30%/0.8% p/v) H2O ultra-pure 73 Anexe B – Endolysins genes ply500 ATGGCATTAACAGAGGCATGGCTAATTGAAAAAGCAAATCGCAAATTGAATGCTGGGGGA ATGTATAAAATTACATCGGATAAAACACGAAATGTAATTAAAAAAATGGCAAAAGAAGGT ATTTATCTTTGTGTTGCGCAAGGTTACCGCTCAACAGCGGAACAAAATGCGCTATATGCA CAAGGGAGAACCAAACCTGGAGCAATTGTTACTAATGCCAAGGGCGGGCAATCTAATCAC AACTACGGGGTAGCTGTTGACTTGTGCTTGTATACAAATGACGGAAAAGATGTTATTTGG GAGTCAACAACTTCCCGGTGGAAAAAGGTTGTTGCTGCTATGAAAGCAGAAGGGTTTAAA TGGGGCGGAGACTGGAAAAGTTTTAAAGACTATCCGCATTTTGAACTATGTGATGCTGTA AGTGGTGAGAAAATCCCTGCTGCAACACAAAACACTAATACAAATTCAAATCGTTACGAG GGTAAAGTCATGATAGCGCACCACTGCTACCGAAAATGGACTTTAAATCATCACCATTCC GCATGTATAAGGTAGGAACTGAGTTCTTAGTATATGATCATAATCAATATTGGTACAAG ACATACATTGATGACAAACTTTACTACATGTATAAAAGCTTTTGCGATGTTGTAGCTAAA AAAGACGCAAAAGGTCGCATCAAAGTTCGAATTAAAAGCGCGAAAGACTTGCGTATTCCA GTCTGGAATAACATAAAATTGAATTCTGGGAAAATTAAATGGTATGCACCCAATGTAAAA CTAGCGTGGTACAACTATCGAAGAGGATATTTAGAGCTATGGTATCCGAACGACGGCTGG TATTACACAGCAGAATACTTCTTAAAATAA Fig. B1– Endolysin Ply500 sequence derived from Listeria phage A500. ply511 ATGGTAAAATATACCGTAGAGAACAAAATTATTGCAGGATTACCTAAAGGTAAACTAAAA GGGGCTAACTTTGTTATTGCTCATGAAACTGCAAATAGCAAGTCTACTATTGACAATGAA GTAAGCTACATGACTAGGAACTGGAAGAACGCATTTGTAACTCACTTTGTAGGTGGCGGA GGTAGAGTCGTTCAGGTTGCTAATGTAAACTATGTTTCTTGGGGAGCAGGTCAGTATGCT AACTCTTATTCCTATGCGCAGGTAGAGTTGTGCCGTACAAGTAATGCAACTACATTTAAG AAAGACTATGAAGTGTACTGTCAATTACTAGTAGACCTAGCTAAAAAAGCAGGTATCCCT ATTACACTTGACTCTGGTAGTAAAACTAGTGATAAAGGTATTAAATCCCATAAATGGGTT GCTGATAAGCTAGGAGGAACAACACACCAAGACCCATATGCTTACTTAAGCTCATGGGGT ATTAGTAAAGCACAATTTGCTAGTGACTTGGCTAAAGTATCTGGCGGAGGAAACACAGGA ACAGCGCCAGCTAAACCAAGCACACCAGCACCTAAACCAAGCACACCATCTACTAACCTA GACAAACTTGGCTTAGTAGACTACATGAACGCTAAGAAAATGGACTCTAGCTACAGTAAC AGAGATAAGTTAGCTAAACAGTATGGTATTGCTAACTATTCAGGAACAGCTAGCCAGAAC ACTACACTCCTTAGTAAAATTAAAGGAGGAGCACCTAAACCAAGCACACCAGCACCTAAA CCTAGTACATCTACAGCTAAGAAAATTTATTTCCCACCAAATAAAGGAAACTGGTCTGTG TATCCAACAAATAAAGCACCCGTTAAGGCTAATGCTATTGGTGCTATTAACCCTACTAAA TTCGGAGGATTGACTTACACTATCCAAAAAGATAGAGGAAACGGTGTATACGAAATCCAA ACAGACCAATTCGGCAGAGTTCAAGTCTATGGTGCACCTAGTACAGGAGCAGTTATCAAA AAATAA Fig. B2– Endolysin Ply511 sequence derived from Listeria phage A511. 74 plyP100 ATGGTAAAATATACCGTAGAGAACAAAATTATTGCAGGATTACCTAAAGGTAAACTAAAA GGGGCTAACTTTGTTATTGCTCATGAAACTGCAAATAGCAAGTCTACTATTGACAATGAA GTAAGCTACATGACTAGGAACTGGAAGAACGCATTTGTAACTCACTTTGTAGGTGGCGGA GGTAGAGTCGTTCAGGTTGCTAATGTAAACTATGTTTCTTGGGGAGCAGGTCAGTATGCT AACTCTTATTCCTATGCGCAGGTAGAGTTGTGCCGTACAAGTAATGCAACTACATTTAAG AAAGACTATGAAGTGTACTGTCAATTACTAGTAGACCTAGCTAAAAAAGCAGGTATCCCT ATTACACTTGACTCTGGTAGTAAAACTAGTGATAAAGGTATTAAATCCCATAAATGGGTT GCTGATAAGCTAGGAGGAACAACACACCAAGACCCATATGCTTACTTAAGCTCATGGGGT ATTAGTAAAGCACAATTTGCTAGTGACTTGGCTAAAGTATCTGGCGGAGGAAACACAGGA ACAGCGCCAGCTAAACCAAGCACACCAGCACCTAAACCAAGCACACCATCTACTAACCTA GACAAACTTGGCTTAGTAGACTACATGAACGCTAAGAAAATGGACTCTAGCTACAGTAAC AGAGCTAAGTTAGCTAAACAGTATGGTATTGCTAACTATTCAGGAACAGCTAGCCAGAAC ACTACACTCCTTAGTAAAATTAAAGGAGGAGCACCTAAACCAAGCACACCAGCACCTAAA CCTAGTACATCTACAGCTAAGAAAATTTATTTCCCACCAAATAAAGGAAACTGGTCTGTG TATCCAACAAATAAAGCACCCGTTAAGGCTAATGCTATTGGTGCTATTAACCCTACTAAA TTCGGAGGATTGACTTACACTATCCAAAAAGATAGAGGAAACGGTGTATACGAAATCCAA ACAGACCAATTCGGCAGAGTTCAAGTCTATGGTGCACCTAGTACAGGAGCAGTTATCAAA AAATAA Fig. B3– Endolysin PlyP100 sequence derived from Listeria phage P100. 75 Anexe C – Protein quantification 2500 y = 1049,3x - 173,85 R² = 0,9964 Protein conc. (ug/ml) 2000 1500 1000 500 0 0,00 0,50 1,00 1,50 2,00 2,50 OD (580 nm) Series1 Linear (Series1) Linear (Series1) Fig. C4– Calibration curve of BSA protein used in BCA assay for protein quantification. 76