American Chemical Society
Browse
sb0c00064_si_001.pdf (245.35 kB)

Toolkit Development for Cyanogenic and Gold Biorecovery Chassis Chromobacterium violaceum

Download (245.35 kB)
journal contribution
posted on 2020-03-19, 18:42 authored by Lu Ting Liow, Maybelle Kho Go, Matthew Wook Chang, Wen Shan Yew
Chromobacterium violaceum has been of interest recently due to its cyanogenic ability and its potential role in environmental sustainability via the biorecovery of gold from electronic waste. However, as with many nonmodel bacteria, there are limited genetic tools to implement the use of this Gram-negative chassis in synthetic biology. We propose a system that involves assaying spontaneous antibiotic resistances and using broad host range vectors to develop episomal vectors for nonmodel Gram-negative bacteria. These developed vectors can subsequently be used to characterize inducible promoters for gene expressions and implementing CRISPRi to inhibit endogenous gene expression for further studies. Here, we developed the first episomal genetic toolkit for C. violaceum consisting of two origins of replication, three antibiotic resistance genes, and four inducible promoter systems. We examined the occurrences of spontaneous resistances of the bacterium to the chosen selection markers to prevent incidences of false positives. We also tested broad host range vectors from four different incompatibility groups and characterized four inducible promoter systems, which potentially can be applied in other Gram-negative nonmodel bacteria. CRISPRi was also implemented to inhibit violacein pigment production in C. violaceum. This systematic toolkit will aid future genetic circuitry building in this chassis and other nonmodel bacteria for synthetic biology and biotechnological applications.

History