Bacillus subtilis biosensor engineered to assess meat spoilage.

Details

Serval ID
serval:BIB_7DE24D5C980A
Type
Article: article from journal or magazin.
Publication sub-type
Editorial
Collection
Publications
Title
Bacillus subtilis biosensor engineered to assess meat spoilage.
Journal
ACS Synthetic Biology
Author(s)
Daszczuk A., Dessalegne Y., Drenth I., Hendriks E., Jo E., van Lente T., Oldebesten A., Parrish J., Poljakova W., Purwanto A.A., van Raaphorst R., Boonstra M., van Heel A., Herber M., van der Meulen S., Siebring J., Sorg R.A., Heinemann M., Kuipers O.P., Veening J.W.
ISSN
2161-5063 (Electronic)
ISSN-L
2161-5063
Publication state
Published
Issued date
2014
Volume
3
Number
12
Pages
999-1002
Language
english
Abstract
Here, we developed a cell-based biosensor that can assess meat freshness using the Gram-positive model bacterium Bacillus subtilis as a chassis. Using transcriptome analysis, we identified promoters that are specifically activated by volatiles released from spoiled meat. The most strongly activated promoter was PsboA, which drives expression of the genes required for the bacteriocin subtilosin. Next, we created a novel BioBrick compatible integration plasmid for B. subtilis and cloned PsboA as a BioBrick in front of the gene encoding the chromoprotein amilGFP inside this vector. We show that the newly identified promoter could efficiently drive fluorescent protein production in B. subtilis in response to spoiled meat and thus can be used as a biosensor to detect meat spoilage.
Keywords
Bacillus subtilis/chemistry, Bacillus subtilis/genetics, Bacteriocins/genetics, Bacteriocins/metabolism, Biosensing Techniques/methods, Fluorescent Dyes, Gene Expression Profiling, Genetic Engineering/methods, Meat/analysis, Peptides, Cyclic/genetics, Peptides, Cyclic/metabolism, Plasmids, Synthetic Biology, Volatile Organic Compounds
Pubmed
Web of science
Create date
11/10/2016 16:34
Last modification date
20/08/2019 15:39
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