1 research outputs found
Comparison of Kill Switch Toxins in Plant-Beneficial <i>Pseudomonas fluorescens</i> Reveals Drivers of Lethality, Stability, and Escape
Kill switches provide a biocontainment strategy in which
unwanted
growth of an engineered microorganism is prevented by expression of
a toxin gene. A major challenge in kill switch engineering is balancing
evolutionary stability with robust cell killing activity in application
relevant host strains. Understanding host-specific containment dynamics
and modes of failure helps to develop potent yet stable kill switches.
To guide the design of robust kill switches in the agriculturally
relevant strain Pseudomonas fluorescens SBW25, we
present a comparison of lethality, stability, and genetic escape of
eight different toxic effectors in the presence of their cognate inactivators
(i.e., toxin–antitoxin modules, polymorphic exotoxin–immunity
systems, restriction endonuclease–methyltransferase pair).
We find that cell killing capacity and evolutionary stability are
inversely correlated and dependent on the level of protection provided
by the inactivator gene. Decreasing the proteolytic stability of the
inactivator protein can increase cell killing capacity, but at the
cost of long-term circuit stability. By comparing toxins within the
same genetic context, we determine that modes of genetic escape increase
with circuit complexity and are driven by toxin activity, the protective
capacity of the inactivator, and the presence of mutation-prone sequences
within the circuit. Collectively, the results of our study reveal
that circuit complexity, toxin choice, inactivator stability, and
DNA sequence design are powerful drivers of kill switch stability
and valuable targets for optimization of biocontainment systems
