Center for Advanced Research in Environmental Genomics, Department of Biology, University of Ottawa, 30 Marie Curie, Ottawa, ON, K1N 6N5, Canada.
Fisheries and Oceans Canada, 4160 Marine Drive, West Vancouver, BC, V7V 1N6, Canada.
Mar Biotechnol (NY). 2017 Dec;19(6):563-569. doi: 10.1007/s10126-017-9776-2. Epub 2017 Oct 5.
As the world increasingly relies on aquaculture operations to meet rising seafood demands, reliable biocontainment measures for farmed fish stocks are desired to minimize ecological impacts arising from interactions of cultured fish with wild populations. One possible biocontainment strategy is to induce a dietary dependence on a vitamin, such as thiamine (vitamin B1), required for survival. Fish expressing thiaminase (an enzyme that degrades thiamine) within a confined aquaculture facility could receive supplemental thiamine to allow survival and normal growth, whereas escapees lacking this dietary rescue would die from thiamine deficiency. To test the concept and efficacy of such a dietary dependency system (for potential future use in larger aquaculture species), we expressed thiaminase in zebrafish as a test model. We drove the expression of thiaminase under the strong ubiquitous and constitutive control of the CMV promoter which resulted in non-viable fish, indicating that the thiaminase sequence kills fish. However, the CMV promoter is too strong to allow conditional survival since the lethality could not be rescued by exogenous thiamine provided as a supplement to typical food. In addition, microinjection of 0.5 pg of thiaminase mRNA in zebrafish embryos at the one-cell stage resulted in 50% larval mortality at 5 days post-fertilization (dpf), which was partially rescued by thiamine supplementation. Evaluating the efficacy of biocontainment strategies helps assess which methods can reliably prevent ecological impacts arising from breaches in physical containment systems that release engineered organisms to nature, and consequently provides critical information for use in regulatory risk assessment processes.
随着世界越来越依赖水产养殖作业来满足不断增长的海鲜需求,人们希望为养殖鱼类种群采取可靠的生物遏制措施,以最大限度地减少养殖鱼类与野生种群相互作用所带来的生态影响。一种可能的生物遏制策略是诱导鱼类对一种维生素(如硫胺素,即维生素 B1)产生饮食依赖,这种维生素是鱼类生存所必需的。在封闭的水产养殖设施中,表达硫胺酶(一种降解硫胺素的酶)的鱼类可以接受补充的硫胺素来维持生存和正常生长,而缺乏这种饮食救助的逃逸者则会因硫胺素缺乏而死亡。为了测试这种饮食依赖系统的概念和效果(将来可能用于更大的水产养殖物种),我们以斑马鱼作为试验模型,在其体内表达了硫胺酶。我们通过 CMV 启动子的强广泛和组成型控制来驱动硫胺酶的表达,这导致了非存活的鱼类,表明硫胺酶序列能杀死鱼类。然而,CMV 启动子过于强大,无法实现条件生存,因为通过将外源性硫胺素作为典型食物的补充来无法挽救其致死性。此外,在斑马鱼胚胎的单细胞阶段,微注射 0.5pg 的硫胺酶 mRNA 导致 5 天孵化后(dpf)50%的幼虫死亡,而通过硫胺素补充部分挽救了这种死亡率。评估生物遏制策略的效果有助于评估哪些方法可以可靠地防止因物理遏制系统失效而释放工程生物到自然环境中所带来的生态影响,从而为监管风险评估过程提供了关键信息。