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Open source approaches to establishing Roseobacter clade bacteria as synthetic biology chassis for biogeoengineering

Aim. The nascent field of bio-geoengineering stands to benefit from synthetic biologists’ efforts to standardise, and in so doing democratise, biomolecular research methods. Roseobacter clade bacteria comprise 15–20% of oceanic bacterio-plankton communities, making them a prime candidate for establi...

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Autores principales: Borg, Yanika, Grigonyte, Aurelija Marija, Boeing, Philipp, Wolfenden, Bethan, Smith, Patrick, Beaufoy, William, Rose, Simon, Ratisai, Tonderai, Zaikin, Alexey, Nesbeth, Darren N.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: PeerJ Inc. 2016
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4941783/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/27441104
http://dx.doi.org/10.7717/peerj.2031
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author Borg, Yanika
Grigonyte, Aurelija Marija
Boeing, Philipp
Wolfenden, Bethan
Smith, Patrick
Beaufoy, William
Rose, Simon
Ratisai, Tonderai
Zaikin, Alexey
Nesbeth, Darren N.
author_facet Borg, Yanika
Grigonyte, Aurelija Marija
Boeing, Philipp
Wolfenden, Bethan
Smith, Patrick
Beaufoy, William
Rose, Simon
Ratisai, Tonderai
Zaikin, Alexey
Nesbeth, Darren N.
author_sort Borg, Yanika
collection PubMed
description Aim. The nascent field of bio-geoengineering stands to benefit from synthetic biologists’ efforts to standardise, and in so doing democratise, biomolecular research methods. Roseobacter clade bacteria comprise 15–20% of oceanic bacterio-plankton communities, making them a prime candidate for establishment of synthetic biology chassis for bio-geoengineering activities such as bioremediation of oceanic waste plastic. Developments such as the increasing affordability of DNA synthesis and laboratory automation continue to foster the establishment of a global ‘do-it-yourself’ research community alongside the more traditional arenas of academe and industry. As a collaborative group of citizen, student and professional scientists we sought to test the following hypotheses: (i) that an incubator capable of cultivating bacterial cells can be constructed entirely from non-laboratory items, (ii) that marine bacteria from the Roseobacter clade can be established as a genetically tractable synthetic biology chassis using plasmids conforming to the BioBrick(TM) standard and finally, (iii) that identifying and subcloning genes from a Roseobacter clade species can readily by achieved by citizen scientists using open source cloning and bioinformatic tools. Method. We cultivated three Roseobacter species, Roseobacter denitrificans, Oceanobulbus indolifexand Dinoroseobacter shibae. For each species we measured chloramphenicol sensitivity, viability over 11 weeks of glycerol-based cryopreservation and tested the effectiveness of a series of electroporation and heat shock protocols for transformation using a variety of plasmid types. We also attempted construction of an incubator-shaker device using only publicly available components. Finally, a subgroup comprising citizen scientists designed and attempted a procedure for isolating the cold resistance anf1 gene from Oceanobulbus indolifexcells and subcloning it into a BioBrick(TM) formatted plasmid. Results. All species were stable over 11 weeks of glycerol cryopreservation, sensitive to 17 µg/mL chloramphenicol and resistant to transformation using the conditions and plasmids tested. An incubator-shaker device, ‘UCLHack-12’ was assembled and used to cultivate sufficient quantity of Oceanobulbus indolifexcells to enable isolation of the anf1 gene and its subcloning into a plasmid to generate the BioBrick(TM) BBa_K729016. Conclusion.The process of ‘de-skilling’ biomolecular techniques, particularly for relatively under-investigated organisms, is still on-going. However, our successful cell growth and DNA manipulation experiments serve to indicate the types of capabilities that are now available to citizen scientists. Science democratised in this way can make a positive contribution to the debate around the use of bio-geoengineering to address oceanic pollution or climate change.
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spelling pubmed-49417832016-07-20 Open source approaches to establishing Roseobacter clade bacteria as synthetic biology chassis for biogeoengineering Borg, Yanika Grigonyte, Aurelija Marija Boeing, Philipp Wolfenden, Bethan Smith, Patrick Beaufoy, William Rose, Simon Ratisai, Tonderai Zaikin, Alexey Nesbeth, Darren N. PeerJ Bioengineering Aim. The nascent field of bio-geoengineering stands to benefit from synthetic biologists’ efforts to standardise, and in so doing democratise, biomolecular research methods. Roseobacter clade bacteria comprise 15–20% of oceanic bacterio-plankton communities, making them a prime candidate for establishment of synthetic biology chassis for bio-geoengineering activities such as bioremediation of oceanic waste plastic. Developments such as the increasing affordability of DNA synthesis and laboratory automation continue to foster the establishment of a global ‘do-it-yourself’ research community alongside the more traditional arenas of academe and industry. As a collaborative group of citizen, student and professional scientists we sought to test the following hypotheses: (i) that an incubator capable of cultivating bacterial cells can be constructed entirely from non-laboratory items, (ii) that marine bacteria from the Roseobacter clade can be established as a genetically tractable synthetic biology chassis using plasmids conforming to the BioBrick(TM) standard and finally, (iii) that identifying and subcloning genes from a Roseobacter clade species can readily by achieved by citizen scientists using open source cloning and bioinformatic tools. Method. We cultivated three Roseobacter species, Roseobacter denitrificans, Oceanobulbus indolifexand Dinoroseobacter shibae. For each species we measured chloramphenicol sensitivity, viability over 11 weeks of glycerol-based cryopreservation and tested the effectiveness of a series of electroporation and heat shock protocols for transformation using a variety of plasmid types. We also attempted construction of an incubator-shaker device using only publicly available components. Finally, a subgroup comprising citizen scientists designed and attempted a procedure for isolating the cold resistance anf1 gene from Oceanobulbus indolifexcells and subcloning it into a BioBrick(TM) formatted plasmid. Results. All species were stable over 11 weeks of glycerol cryopreservation, sensitive to 17 µg/mL chloramphenicol and resistant to transformation using the conditions and plasmids tested. An incubator-shaker device, ‘UCLHack-12’ was assembled and used to cultivate sufficient quantity of Oceanobulbus indolifexcells to enable isolation of the anf1 gene and its subcloning into a plasmid to generate the BioBrick(TM) BBa_K729016. Conclusion.The process of ‘de-skilling’ biomolecular techniques, particularly for relatively under-investigated organisms, is still on-going. However, our successful cell growth and DNA manipulation experiments serve to indicate the types of capabilities that are now available to citizen scientists. Science democratised in this way can make a positive contribution to the debate around the use of bio-geoengineering to address oceanic pollution or climate change. PeerJ Inc. 2016-07-07 /pmc/articles/PMC4941783/ /pubmed/27441104 http://dx.doi.org/10.7717/peerj.2031 Text en ©2016 Borg et al. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) , which permits unrestricted use, distribution, reproduction and adaptation in any medium and for any purpose provided that it is properly attributed. For attribution, the original author(s), title, publication source (PeerJ) and either DOI or URL of the article must be cited.
spellingShingle Bioengineering
Borg, Yanika
Grigonyte, Aurelija Marija
Boeing, Philipp
Wolfenden, Bethan
Smith, Patrick
Beaufoy, William
Rose, Simon
Ratisai, Tonderai
Zaikin, Alexey
Nesbeth, Darren N.
Open source approaches to establishing Roseobacter clade bacteria as synthetic biology chassis for biogeoengineering
title Open source approaches to establishing Roseobacter clade bacteria as synthetic biology chassis for biogeoengineering
title_full Open source approaches to establishing Roseobacter clade bacteria as synthetic biology chassis for biogeoengineering
title_fullStr Open source approaches to establishing Roseobacter clade bacteria as synthetic biology chassis for biogeoengineering
title_full_unstemmed Open source approaches to establishing Roseobacter clade bacteria as synthetic biology chassis for biogeoengineering
title_short Open source approaches to establishing Roseobacter clade bacteria as synthetic biology chassis for biogeoengineering
title_sort open source approaches to establishing roseobacter clade bacteria as synthetic biology chassis for biogeoengineering
topic Bioengineering
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4941783/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/27441104
http://dx.doi.org/10.7717/peerj.2031
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