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MICR 306 Advanced Applications of Viruses (Part 4.2) Prof. J. Lin University of KwaZulu-Natal Westville campus Microbiology Discipline 2014 School of Life Sciences Biotechnology • Organisms (bacteria, fungi, viruses) with desirable properties • Environments – Conditions Enrichment process Competitive exclusive principle APPLICATIONS • • • • • • Molecular cloning (RDNA 220) Vaccine Development Gene Therapy Cancer therapy Phage Therapy (Drug Resistance Problem) Nanoscience – where physics, chemistry and biology collide • Synthetic Biology • Biological Control Agents • Protein Engineering Phage Therapy (Resistance problems) • Narrow range: host (strain) specific – Results in less harm to the normal body flora and ecology than commonly used antibiotics – As bacteria evolve resistance, the relevant phages naturally evolve alongside. – Staphylococcus, Streptococcus bacteriophages (√ ) – TB, E. coli 0157H7 etc….. (????) • Disadvantages: – The development of a large collection of well-characterized phage for a broad range of pathogens – Methods to rapidly determine which of the phage strains in the collection will be effective for any given infection. • Currently there are more than 10 phage bio-companies. Comparison of the Prophylactic and/or Therapeutic Use of Phages and Antibiotics Comments Bacteriophages Antibiotics High specificity may be considered to be a disadvantage Very specific Target both pathogenic phages Disease-causing bacterium must be identified Dysbiosis and chances of microorganisms and normal of before applications. Antibiotics have a higher probability of developing secondary microflora which may lead to being effective than phages when the identity of the etiologic infections are avoided. serious secondary infections. agent has not been determined. Replicate at the site of infection where they are most needed. No serious side effects Phage-resistant bacteria remain susceptible to other phages having a similar target range. Selecting new phages is a relatively rapid process that can frequently be accomplished in days or weeks. They are metabolized and eliminated from the body and do not necessarily concentrate at the site of infection. Multiple side effects, including intestinal disorders, allergies, and secondary infections The "exponential growth" of phages at the site of infection may require less frequent phage administration in order to achieve the optimal therapeutic effect. Resistance to antibiotics is not limited to targeted bacteria. Because of their more broad-spectrum activity, antibiotics select for many resistant bacterial species, not just for resistant mutants of the targeted bacteria. Developing a new antibiotic is a time-consuming process and may take several years. Evolutionary arguments support the idea that active phages can be selected against every antibiotic-resistant or phageresistant bacterium by the ever-ongoing process of natural selection. A few minor side effects reported for therapeutic phages may have been due to the liberation of endotoxins from bacteria lysed in vivo by the phages. Such effects also may be observed when antibiotics are used. Host immunity Phage Therapy • Advantages: – Useful where multiple antibiotic resistance has developed – host specific - won't kill off commensal bacteria – Rapid action – exponential replication – self-limiting infection once pathogenic bacteria are killed – cheap - single dose - self propagates • Disadvantage - strain specific – need to generate, keep and archive large bank of phage serotypes – need accurate diagnosis – must give cocktail of phage types to prevent bacterial escape Multi drug resistant Pseudomonas • Also use for detecting pathogenic bacteria - phage infects bacterial lawn - assay plaques by antibody or by phage-encoded marker gene expression Breaking bacterial resistance by designer phages • Engineered bacteriophage T7 to constitutively express DspB: an enzyme that hydrolyses β-1,6-N-acetyl-d-glucosamine, which is an adhesin that is required for biofilm formation and integrity in Staphylococcus spp. and Escherichia coli clinical isolates. • Following lysis, T7DspB and DspB are released into the biofilm, which leads to re-infection and degradation of β-1,6-N-acetyl-d-glucosamine. • Bacteriophage M13 was engineered to express LexA3, which suppresses the SOS DNA repair system that bacteria require to counteract antibiotic-induced oxidative stress. Infection by this designer phage sensitizes E. coli to quinolone antibiotics. Synthetic Biology Scientists have assembled the first synthetic virus and bacteria (2010). The US researchers built the infectious agent from scratch using the genome sequence for polio. To construct the virus, the researchers say they followed a recipe they downloaded from the internet and used gene sequences from a mail-order supplier. Having constructed the virus, which appears to be identical to its natural counterpart injected it into mice to demonstrate that it was active. The animals were paralysed and then died. A series of synthetic virus-like particles useful in the characterization of human papillomavirus type 16 (HPV16) infection and assays employing the synthetic particles have been developed. Idea Synthetic Biologists who are interested in testing the idea that since natural biological systems are so complicated, we would be better off re-building the natural systems that we care about, from the ground up, in order to provide engineered surrogates that are easier to understand and interact with. A correlation-based gene network key enabling technologies • DNA sequencing – Functional level • Fabrication – de novo DNA synthesis and assembly of fragments of DNA gene synthesis. • Modeling • Measurement – Precise and accurate quantitative measurements of biological systems – Differences between predicted and measured system behavior can identify gaps in understanding and explain why synthetic systems don't always behave as intended Potential applications Six categories: • bioenergy, • agriculture and food production, • environmental protection and remediation • consumer products, • chemical production, • human health. Current developing products • The Sleeping Beauty transposon system – extinct Tc1/mariner-type transposons • Biosensor technology – to detect viruses, bacteria, hormones, drugs, toxics, pollutants and DNA sequences • Biological controls • Nanotechnology Virus/Virus Like Particle Structural stability and tolerance towards manipulation (nm ranges, self assembly) serve as building blocks for novel nano-materials Viral genetic Viruses are highly efficient replicators & viral gene expression is adapted to host systems large production Biomolecules (DNA/RNA) manipulation (Molecular biology) Nanoscience – where physics, chemistry and biology collide Biological systems emerge from evolved sophisticated processes developed by Nature. Understanding of how the biological materials function can help us to synthesize, control and manipulate materials at an atomic scale. Researchers also begin this biological manufacturing process by assembling nucleic acids of a selected bacterium, then essentially infecting them with a virus. When the virus infects the bacterium, the bacterium can't distinguish between its own genome and the viral genome, and it starts making the protein the virus is telling it to make. The result is the production of novel proteins, which have commercial uses. Advantages • They represent very stable and self-assembled architectures at the nanometer level with sizes ranging from 10 nm to 200 nm, which are otherwise very difficult to make by standard synthetic methods in the laboratory. • Three dimensional structures can be characterized at near atomic resolution • They can be purified inexpensively on a large scale, a crucial advantage when considered for materials development. • For each type of virus and virus-like protein assembly, all the particles are identical. We can therefore envision them as truly mono-disperse nanoparticles. Most commonly used viruses • • • • • • Cowpea mosaic virus (CPMV) Cowpea chlorotic mottle virus (CCMV) Bacteriophage MS2 Bacteriophage M13 Tobacco mosaic virus (TMV) Turnip yellow mosaic virus (TYMV) Conventional protein conjugation strategies on bionanoparticles (BNP) • • • • Drug delivery Bio-imaging Bio-mineralization Tissue engineering Applications Table Genetic modifications in BNPs BNP Type of insert Expression host TMV Antigenic peptides, RGD peptides cysteine,lysine,His6 tag (Arginylglycylaspartic acid – a cell adhesion motif) Tobacco plants and bacterial expression CPMV Peptide antigens, cysteine, lysine, His6 tag Cowpea plants CCMV subE mutant, cysteine Cowpea plants and bacterial expression Ferritin AG4, Co2 peptide, Native host P22 FHV Cysteine Antigenic insert Bacteria host Native (insect cells) and recombinant (baculovirus) MjHsp Metal binding peptides, cysteine, RGD peptide Bacteria host MS2 HBVLP Cysteine, unnatural amino acid Unnatural amino acid, His6peptide Bacteria host Recombinant M13 Qβ Metal binding peptides, proteins Unnatural amino acids Bacteria host Bacteria host and cell free Viruses for Peptide display: M13 Phage or plant virus (TMV) Coat Protein Fusions Need : non-enveloped virus many repeat capsid subunits ordered capsid array - amplified display external loops or termini available for peptide addition via gene fusion Mass peptide display on outer surface of TMV particle N C 60S loop Tobacco mosaic virus TMV VIRION Assembly of mixed TMV capsids carrying epitope variants = useful vaccine vs highly variable pathogen Cysteine-mutant TMV Bacteriophages + metal binding peptide Semiconductor Bacteriophage M13 + amine rich peptide CoPt-FePt; ZnS-CdS Magetic Liquid Cystal Bioconjugational techniques M13 -semiconductor The genetically engineered hepatitis B virus particle (green) binds to nickel and antibodies (dark blue) specific for troponin I, a marker associated with heart attacks Developing molecular-scale technologies include Zettacore, which is examining ways to design and use molecules in modern electronic applications, and NanoMagnetics, which makes magnetic particles grown inside uniform hollow protein spheres 12 nanometers in diameter. The technology has applications in water purification, data storage and medical imaging. Virus-Assembled Batteries More than half the weight and size of today's batteries comes from supporting materials that contribute nothing to storing energy. Genetically engineered viruses can assemble active battery materials into a compact, regular structure, to make an ultra-thin, transparent battery electrode that stores nearly three times as much energy as those in today's lithium-ion batteries. The scientists used M13 viruses to make the positive electrode of a lithium-ion battery, which they tested with a conventional negative electrode. By adding sequences of nucleotides to the virus' DNA, the researchers directed these proteins to form with an additional amino acid that binds to cobalt ions. The viruses with these new proteins then coat themselves with cobalt ions in a solution, which eventually leads, after reactions with water, to cobalt oxide, an advanced battery material with much higher storage capacity than the carbon-based materials now used in lithium-ion batteries. Applications for Electrical Devices Virus battery Virus-Assembled Batteries Recipe for using viruses to make an electrode: 1Dip a polymer electrolyte in a solution of genetically engineered viruses. 2These form a uniform coating on the electrolyte. 3Dip the coated polymer into a solution of battery materials. 4The viruses coat themselves with the battery material, transforming into nanowires with a regular crystal structure good for high-energy batteries. New virus-built battery could power cars, electronic devices 2nd April, Science 2011 Electronic devices MIT researchers use genetically modified virus to produce structures that improve solar-cell efficiency by nearly one-third. --2011 Viruses as Energy converting Materials or Catalysts • High reactivity and large surface area • Conjugation of chromophores to viral template photocatalyst solar energy cell • Virus template as catalyst supports enhance the activity Nanotechnology Questions • Safety and Security • Social and Ethical • Scientists are very intelligent people, very dedicated to their work and their fields of endeavor. But many times they fail to communicate to the public policymakers the importance of the things that they’re involved in