Anzeige
For the first time, researchers are able to look at the need for every gene in a bacterial cell in a single experiment. The new method will transform the study of gene activity and the search for weaknesses in bacterial armouries.
Using a newly developed, next-gen sequencing method, a team established which genes Salmonella Typhi needs to survive and which are more of a luxury. The results and the method will be a boon to scientists tackling bacterial disease, allowing them to capitalize on the abundance of genomic sequence data from next-generation sequencing technologies.
Every year 22 million people are infected and 220,000 die from infection with S. Typhi. It is a special threat in the developing world, in areas with poor sanitation or a lack of clean drinking water.
The team were able to look at almost all the genes in S. Typhi and showed that it needs only 356 genes for survival: 4162 genes were not essential. Knowing which genes are essential to the survival of pathogens, researchers can seek treatments to target those genes.
"We developed a new method that is ten times more powerful than any previous technique," says Sanger Institute graduate student Gemma Langridge, one of the first authors on the paper. "By combining transposon-induced mutagenesis – a method whereby small chunks of cut-and-paste DNA sequence are inserted into the genome effectively disabling individual genes – and high-throughput sequencing, we have been able to determine which genes are essential for the survival of S. Typhi and which are non-essential."
"Crucially, our new method allows us to achieve all this in just a single experiment."
Using the novel method, which the team have named TraDIS (Transposon Directed Insertion site Sequencing), they inserted transposons into the S. Typhi genome to generate more than one million mutants. They then grew the bacteria and used next-generation sequencing to directly identify 370,000 insertion sites in the S. Typhi genome – an average of more than 80 insertion sites per gene. Previous methods produce only a few mutations per gene.
If a transposon inserts into an essential gene, the gene is silenced and that mutant cell will not grow and it – and the transposon insert – will be absent from the mutant pool. By sequencing DNA from the entire pool – approximately 1 million mutants in total – the team were able to identify genes in which no transposon insertions had been detected.
In a single experiment using the TraDIS method, the team were able to determine whether or not 99.6% of the S. Typhi genes are essential to its survival.
"Sequencing centres such as ours can produce vast amounts of genomic data at a pace unimaginable just a few years ago," explains Professor Julian Parkhill, Director of Sequencing and head of Pathogen Genomics at the Sanger Institute. "One of our aims is to develop high-throughput research methods that can exploit this explosion of genetic data, to ensure these resources can be used effectively. We can now discover which of all the genes in an organism are essential to its survival or required for growth under special conditions, such as infection. Our new TraDIS method will make a dramatic difference to the ability to carry out such genome-wide research."
Importantly, the team applied the method to a clinical problem by looking at how S. Typhi might survive in humans. Typhoid can be spread by carriers who, without showing symptoms, act as reservoirs, storing the bacterium in the gallbladder and passing it to others. The most famous such carrier was Typhoid Mary, who worked in the food industry in the US and spread typhoid fever without exhibiting any symptoms herself.
But, bacteria cannot survive in the fairly hostile environment of the gall bladder unless they are tolerant to bile – the fatty fluid secreted by the gall bladder. Looking at genes involved in bile resistance, allows us to see which genes are essential for helping S. Typhi persist in a carrier.
"We grew the bacteria in ox bile to pick out genes required for bile tolerance," says Keith Turner, Sanger Institute investigator and a senior author on the paper. "We found 169 genes involved in bile tolerance – many of these had not been suspected before and more than 30 are genes not characterized at all.
"Using TraDIS, we have highlighted several possible new targets for treatment that would pick on S. Typhi's need to survive in the gall bladder."
For the first time, it is possible to paint a comprehensive picture of essential, advantageous or burdensome genes in many phases of the bacterial life cycle, to determine functions necessary to support them throughout their entire disease cycle. Such a picture is important for discovery of new targets for treatment.
This elegant new method exemplifies how high-throughput research allows scientists to determine systematically the function of or requirement for individual genes in a single experiment, opening the door for similar analyses of other pathogenic genomes in the future.
Publication Details
Langridge G C, Phan M-D, Turner D J et al. (2009) Simultaneous assay of every Salmonella Typhi gene using one million transposon mutants. Genome Research
Published online before print at doi: 10.1101/gr.097097.109
Funding
This work was supported by the Wellcome Trust.
Participating Centres
The Wellcome Trust Sanger Institute, Wellcome Trust Genome Campus, Hinxton, Cambridge, UK
Environmental Research Institute, University College, Lee Road, Cork, Ireland
Molecular Biology and Biotechnology, University of Sheffield, Firth Court, Western Bank, Sheffield, UK
Department of Veterinary Medicine, University of Cambridge, Madingley Road, Cambridge, UK
Laboratory of Gastrointestinal Pathogens, Centre for Infections, Health Protection Agency, Colindale, London, UK
The Wellcome Trust Sanger Institute, which receives the majority of its funding from the Wellcome Trust, was founded in 1992. The Institute is responsible for the completion of the sequence of approximately one-third of the human genome as well as genomes of model organisms and more than 90 pathogen genomes. In October 2006, new funding was awarded by the Wellcome Trust to exploit the wealth of genome data now available to answer important questions about health and disease. http://www.sanger.ac.uk
The Wellcome Trust is the largest charity in the UK. It funds innovative biomedical research, in the UK and internationally, spending over £600 million each year to support the brightest scientists with the best ideas. The Wellcome Trust supports public debate about biomedical research and its impact on health and wellbeing. http://www.wellcome.ac.uk
Don Powell | Quelle: EurekAlert!
Weitere Informationen: www.sanger.ac.uk
Weitere Berichte zu: biomedical research > clean drinking water > DNA > Genom > genome-wide research > genomic sequence data > medical research > Salmonella > Sequencing > TraDIS > transposon-induced mutagenesis > typhoid
Stem-cell-growing surface enables bone repair
24.05.2012 | University of Michigan
Im wahrsten Sinne „Spitzenforschung“: IPHT-Forscher untersuchen Eiweißfasern mit größter Genauigkeit
24.05.2012 | Institut für Photonische Technologien
Krankheiten wie Parkinson, Alzheimer und bestimmte Krebsformen gehen auf eine fehlerhafte Faltung und Aggregation von Eiweißen im Körper zurück.
Wissenschaftlern des Instituts für Photonische Technologien (IPHT) in Jena ist es erstmals gelungen, Proteinstrukturen auf sub-molekularer Ebene nachzuweisen und spektroskopisch zu analysieren. Ein wichtiger Schritt zum Verständnis der Krankheitsursachen.
„Bis heute hat man nicht genau verstanden, was die fehlerhafte Faltung und Aggregation von Eiweißen, zum Beispiel im Zusammenhang mit Alzheimer, ...
Die Quantenphysik beschreibt physikalische Vorgänge in Festkörpern und anderen Vielteilchensystemen auch mit Hilfe von Quasiteilchen.
Innsbrucker Physikern um Rudolf Grimm ist es nun erstmals gelungen, ein neues Quasiteilchen - ein repulsives Polaron - in einem Quantengas experimentell zu erzeugen. Die Forscher berichten darüber in der Online-Ausgabe der Fachzeitschrift Nature.
Ultrakalte Quantengase sind ein ideales Experimentierfeld, um physikalische Phänomene in Festkörpern zu simulieren. Unter streng kontrollierten Bedingungen ...
Licht lässt die Partikel in der Atmosphäre wachsen. In einem Experiment hat ein internationales Forscherteam erstmals einen neuen Mechanismus nachweisen können, bei dem Partikel durch Licht größer werden und der damit Einfluss auf die Wolkenbildung und das Klima hat.
Photokatalytische Reaktionen können zu einer schnellen Bindung von nicht kondensierenden flüchtigen organischen Kohlenwasserstoffen (VOCs) auf der Oberfläche der Partikel führen. Unter solchen Bedingungen nehme die Größe und Masse der Partikel schnell zu, schreiben die Wissenschaftler im renommierten Fachblatt PNAS.
Die Ergebnisse des Laborexperimentes könnten Effekte erklären, die bisher schon bei Feldkampagnen ...
Ähnlich wie blutsaugende Insekten prüfen Pflanzenschädlinge ihren Wirt auf Abwehrsignale, bevor sie anfangen zu fressen
Pflanzen bilden wenige Minuten nach Angriff eines Fraßfeindes Jasmonsäure, ein Hormon, das die Verteidigung gegen Insekten in Gange setzt mit der Folge, dass giftige Stoffe wie Nikotin oder Verdauungshemmer in den Blättern akkumulieren.
Wissenschaftler des Max-Planck-Instituts für chemische Ökologie, Jena, haben jetzt herausgefunden, dass Zwergzikaden die Verteidigungsbereitschaft von Tabakpflanzen aufspüren können. ...
Wissenschaftlern vom Institut für Physikalische und Theoretische Chemie der Universität Bonn ist es erstmals gelungen, den Transport eines wichtigen Informationsträgers in biologischen Zellen praktisch unmodifiziert in Echtzeit zu filmen.
Die Studie zeigt, wie die so genannte Boten-RNA die Zellkernhülle überwindet und vom Zellkern in das Zytoplasma gelangt. Diese Arbeit ist nun in dem renommierten Journal „Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the USA“ (PNAS) publiziert.
Der Bauplan aller Lebewesen ist in ihrem Erbgut gespeichert. Dieses lagert bei höheren ...
Anzeige
Anzeige

Energieversorger vor dem Umbruch
24.05.2012 | Studien Analysen
Stem-cell-growing surface enables bone repair
24.05.2012 | Biowissenschaften Chemie
Im wahrsten Sinne „Spitzenforschung“: IPHT-Forscher untersuchen Eiweißfasern mit größter Genauigkeit
24.05.2012 | Biowissenschaften Chemie
NieKE Themenforum: Ökonomie - Tierschutz - Lebensmittelsicherheit
24.05.2012 | Veranstaltungsnachrichten
Nachhaltigkeit in der Schifffahrt: Werte vs. Wertschöpfung
24.05.2012 | Veranstaltungsnachrichten
Wissenschaft und Öffentlichkeit
24.05.2012 | Veranstaltungsnachrichten