Gomaa Ahmed A, Klumpe Heidi E, Luo Michelle L, Selle Kurt, Barrangou Rodolphe, Beisel Chase L
mBio. 2014 Jan 28;5(1):e00928-13. doi: 10.1128/mBio.00928-13.
CRISPR (clustered regularly interspaced short palindromic repeats)-Cas (CRISPR-associated) systems in bacteria and archaea employ CRISPR RNAs to specifically recognize the complementary DNA of foreign invaders, leading to sequence-specific cleavage or degradation of the target DNA. Recent work has shown that the accidental or intentional targeting of the bacterial genome is cytotoxic and can lead to cell death. Here, we have demonstrated that genome targeting with CRISPR-Cas systems can be employed for the sequence-specific and titratable removal of individual bacterial strains and species. Using the type I-E CRISPR-Cas system in Escherichia coli as a model, we found that this effect could be elicited using native or imported systems and was similarly potent regardless of the genomic location, strand, or transcriptional activity of the target sequence. Furthermore, the specificity of targeting with CRISPR RNAs could readily distinguish between even highly similar strains in pure or mixed cultures. Finally, varying the collection of delivered CRISPR RNAs could quantitatively control the relative number of individual strains within a mixed culture. Critically, the observed selectivity and programmability of bacterial removal would be virtually impossible with traditional antibiotics, bacteriophages, selectable markers, or tailored growth conditions. Once delivery challenges are addressed, we envision that this approach could offer a novel means to quantitatively control the composition of environmental and industrial microbial consortia and may open new avenues for the development of "smart" antibiotics that circumvent multidrug resistance and differentiate between pathogenic and beneficial microorganisms.
Controlling the composition of microbial populations is a critical aspect in medicine, biotechnology, and environmental cycles. While different antimicrobial strategies, such as antibiotics, antimicrobial peptides, and lytic bacteriophages, offer partial solutions, what remains elusive is a generalized and programmable strategy that can distinguish between even closely related microorganisms and that allows for fine control over the composition of a microbial population. This study demonstrates that RNA-directed immune systems in bacteria and archaea called CRISPR-Cas systems can provide such a strategy. These systems can be employed to selectively and quantitatively remove individual bacterial strains based purely on sequence information, creating opportunities in the treatment of multidrug-resistant infections, the control of industrial fermentations, and the study of microbial consortia.
细菌和古细菌中的CRISPR(成簇规律间隔短回文重复序列)-Cas(CRISPR相关)系统利用CRISPR RNA特异性识别外来入侵者的互补DNA,导致靶DNA的序列特异性切割或降解。最近的研究表明,意外或故意靶向细菌基因组具有细胞毒性,可导致细胞死亡。在此,我们证明了利用CRISPR-Cas系统进行基因组靶向可用于序列特异性和可滴定地去除单个细菌菌株和物种。以大肠杆菌中的I-E型CRISPR-Cas系统为模型,我们发现使用天然或导入系统均可产生这种效果,并且无论靶序列的基因组位置、链或转录活性如何,其效力相似。此外,CRISPR RNA靶向的特异性能够轻易区分纯培养物或混合培养物中甚至高度相似的菌株。最后,改变递送的CRISPR RNA的集合可以定量控制混合培养物中单个菌株的相对数量。至关重要的是,使用传统抗生素、噬菌体、选择标记或定制生长条件几乎不可能实现观察到的细菌去除的选择性和可编程性。一旦解决了递送挑战,我们设想这种方法可以提供一种新颖的手段来定量控制环境和工业微生物群落的组成,并可能为开发规避多药耐药性并区分致病微生物和有益微生物的“智能”抗生素开辟新途径。
控制微生物种群的组成是医学、生物技术和环境循环中的一个关键方面。虽然不同的抗菌策略,如抗生素、抗菌肽和裂解性噬菌体,提供了部分解决方案,但仍然难以捉摸的是一种通用且可编程的策略,该策略能够区分甚至密切相关的微生物,并允许对微生物种群的组成进行精细控制。这项研究表明,细菌和古细菌中称为CRISPR-Cas系统的RNA导向免疫系统可以提供这样一种策略。这些系统可用于仅基于序列信息选择性地和定量地去除单个细菌菌株,为治疗多药耐药感染、控制工业发酵以及研究微生物群落创造机会。