posted on 2023-08-07, 15:36authored byRani Brooks, Lisa Morici, Nicholas Sandoval
Phage therapy to
treat life-threatening drug-resistant infections
has been hampered by technical challenges in phage production. Cell-free
bacteriophage synthesis (CFBS) can overcome the limitations of standard
phage production methods by manufacturing phage virions in vitro.
CFBS mimics intracellular phage assembly using transcription/translation
machinery (TXTL) harvested from bacterial lysates and combined with
reagents to synthesize proteins encoded by a phage genomic DNA template.
These systems may enable rapid phage production and engineering to
accelerate phages from bench-to-bedside. TXTL harvested from wild
type or commonly used bacterial strains was not optimized for bacteriophage
production. Here, we demonstrate that TXTL from genetically modified E. coli BL21 can be used to enhance phage T7 yields
in vitro by CFBS. Expression of 18 E. coli BL21 genes was manipulated by inducible CRISPR interference (CRISPRi)
mediated by nuclease deficient Cas12a from F. novicida (dFnCas12a) to identify genes implicated in T7
propagation as positive or negative effectors. Genes shown to have
a significant effect were overexpressed (positive effectors) or repressed
(negative effectors) to modify the genetic background of TXTL harvested
for CFBS. Phage T7 CFBS yields were improved by up to 10-fold in vitro
through overexpression of translation initiation factor IF-3 (infC) and small RNAs OxyS and CyaR and by repression of
RecC subunit exonuclease RecBCD. Continued improvement of CFBS will
mitigate phage manufacturing bottlenecks and lower hurdles to widespread
adoption of phage therapy.