Pushing into a new chapter
of technologically advanced biological sensors, scientists from the University
of California San Diego and their colleagues in Australia have engineered
bacteria that can detect the presence of tumor DNA in a live organism.
Their innovation, which detected cancer
in the colons of mice, could pave the way to new biosensors capable of
identifying various infections, cancers and other diseases.
The advancement is
described Aug. 11, 2023, in the journal Science. Bacteria previously have been designed to carry
out various diagnostic and therapeutic functions, but lacked the ability to
identify specific DNA sequences and mutations outside of cells. The new
“Cellular Assay for Targeted CRISPR-discriminated Horizontal gene transfer,” or
“CATCH,” was designed to do just that.
“As we started on this project four years ago, we weren’t even sure if using bacteria as a sensor for mammalian DNA was even possible,” said scientific team leader Jeff Hasty, a professor in the UC San Diego School of Biological Sciences and Jacobs School of Engineering. “The detection of gastrointestinal cancers and precancerous lesions is an attractive clinical opportunity to apply this invention.”
Tumors are
known to disperse, or shed, their DNA into the environments surrounding them.
Many technologies can analyze purified DNA in the lab, but these cannot detect
DNA where it is released. Under the CATCH strategy, the researchers engineered
bacteria using CRISPR technology to test free-floating DNA sequences on a
genomic level and compare those samples with predetermined cancer sequences (see video).
“Many bacteria can take up DNA from
their environment, a skill known as natural competence,” said Rob Cooper, the
study’s co-first author and a scientist at UC San Diego’s Synthetic Biology
Institute. Hasty, Cooper and Australian doctor Dan Worthley collaborated
on the idea of natural competence in relation to bacteria and colorectal
cancer, the third-leading cause of cancer-related death in the United States.
They began to formulate the possibility
of engineering bacteria, which are already prevalent in the colon, as new
biosensors that could be deployed inside the gut to detect DNA released from
colorectal tumors. They focused on Acinetobacter baylyi, a bacterium in which Cooper identified the elements necessary for both
taking up DNA and using CRISPR to analyze it.
“Knowing that cell-free DNA can be
mobilized as a signal, or an input, we set out to engineer bacteria that would
respond to tumor DNA at the time and place of disease detection,” said
Worthley, a gastroenterologist and cancer researcher with the Colonoscopy
Clinic in Brisbane, Australia.
“The detection of gastrointestinal cancers and precancerous lesions is
an attractive clinical opportunity to apply this invention.”
— Professor Jeff Hasty
Working with Australian colleagues Susan
Woods and Josephine Wright, the researchers designed, built and tested Acinetobacter
baylyi as a sensor for identifying DNA
from KRAS, a gene that is mutated in many cancers. They programmed the
bacterium with a CRISPR system designed to discriminate mutant from normal
(non-mutated) copies of KRAS. This means that only bacteria that had taken up mutant
forms of KRAS, as found in precancerous polyps and cancers, for example, would
survive to signal or respond to the disease.
The new research is based on previous
ideas related to horizontal gene transfer, a technique used by organisms to
move genetic material between one another in a manner distinct from traditional
parent-to-offspring genetic inheritance. While horizontal gene transfer is
widely known from bacteria to bacteria, the researchers achieved their goal of
applying this concept from mammalian tumors and human cells into bacteria.
“It was incredible when I saw the
bacteria that had taken up the tumor DNA under the microscope. The mice with
tumors grew green bacterial colonies that had acquired the ability to grow on
antibiotic plates,” said Wright.
The researchers are now adapting their
bacteria biosensor strategy with new circuits and different types of bacteria
for detecting and treating human cancers and infections.
“There is so much potential to engineer
bacteria to prevent colorectal cancer, a tumor that is immersed in a stream of
bacteria, that could help, or hinder, its progression,” said Woods.
Associate Professor Siddhartha Mukherjee
of Columbia University, who was not involved in the study, indicated that in
the future, “disease will be treated and prevented by cells, not pills. A
living bacterium that can detect DNA in the gut is a tremendous opportunity to
act as a sentinel to seek and destroy gastrointestinal, and many other,
cancers.”
Source: https://today.ucsd.edu/story/researchers-engineer-bacteria-that-can-detect-tumor-dna
Photo: As seen in a dish, Acinetobacter baylyi (green) bacteria surround clumps of colorectal cancer cells. Credit: Josephine Wright
Source: Researchers engineer bacteria that can detect tumor DNA – Scents of Science (myfusimotors.com)
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