Targeted Genome Editing of Bacteria Within Microbial Communities

Benjamin E. Rubin(Innovative Genomics Institute), Spencer Diamond(Planetary Science Institute), Brady F. Cress(Innovative Genomics Institute), Alexander Crits‐Christoph(University of California, Berkeley), Christine He(Planetary Science Institute), Michael Xu(Innovative Genomics Institute), Zeyi Zhou(Innovative Genomics Institute), Dylan C. J. Smock(Innovative Genomics Institute), Kimberly Tang(Innovative Genomics Institute), Trenton K. Owens(Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory), Netravathi Krishnappa(Innovative Genomics Institute), Rohan Sachdeva(Planetary Science Institute), Adam M. Deutschbauer(Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory), Jillian F. Banfield(Planetary Science Institute), Jennifer A. Doudna(QB3)
bioRxiv (Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory)
July 17, 2020
Cited by 40Open Access
Full Text

Abstract

Knowledge of microbial gene functions comes from manipulating the DNA of individual species in isolation from their natural communities. While this approach to microbial genetics has been foundational, its requirement for culturable microorganisms has left the majority of microbes and their interactions genetically unexplored. Here we describe a generalizable methodology for editing the genomes of specific organisms within a complex microbial community. First, we identified genetically tractable bacteria within a community using a new approach, Environmental Transformation Sequencing (ET-Seq), in which non-targeted transposon integrations were mapped and quantified following community delivery. ET-Seq was repeated with multiple delivery strategies for both a nine-member synthetic bacterial community and a ~200-member microbial bioremediation community. We achieved insertions in 10 species not previously isolated and identified natural competence for foreign DNA integration that depends on the presence of the community. Second, we developed and used DNA-editing All-in-one RNA-guided CRISPR-Cas Transposase (DART) systems for targeted DNA insertion into organisms identified as tractable by ET-Seq, enabling organism- and locus-specific genetic manipulation within the community context. These results demonstrate a strategy for targeted genome editing of specific organisms within microbial communities, establishing a new paradigm for microbial manipulation relevant to research and applications in human, environmental, and industrial microbiomes.


Related Papers

No related papers found

Powered by citation graph analysis