Rice University researchers have developed gas biosensors to "see" into
soil and allow them to follow the behavior of the microbial communities
within.
In a study in the American Chemical Society's journal Environmental
Science and Technology, the Rice team described using genetically
engineered bacteria that release methyl halide gases to monitor
microbial gene expression in soil samples in the lab.
The bacteria are programmed using synthetic biology to release gas to
report when they exchange DNA through horizontal gene transfer, the
process by which organisms share genetic traits without a
parent-to-child relationship. The biosensors allow researchers to
monitor such processes in real time without having to actually see into
or disturb a lab soil sample.
The Rice researchers expect their technique will serve the same purpose
for environmental scientists that fluorescent reporter proteins serve
for biochemists who track protein expression and other processes in
biological systems.
The work by the Rice labs of biogeochemist Caroline Masiello, biochemist
Jonathan Silberg, microbiologist George Bennett and lead author
Hsiao-Ying (Shelly) Cheng, a Rice graduate student, is the first product
of a $1 million grant by the W.M. Keck Foundation to develop
gas-releasing microbial sensors.
"This paper describes a new tool to study how microbes trade genetic
material in the environment," said Masiello, a professor of Earth
science.
"We care about this because the process of horizontal gene transfer
controls a lot of things that are important to humans either because
they're good—it's how rhizobia trade the genes they need to fix nitrogen
and support plant growth—or they're bad—it's how bacteria trade
antibiotic resistance in soils," she said. "It's been much more
challenging in the past to construct models of this dynamic process in
real soils and to study how horizontal gene exchange varies across soil
types. We've created a new set of tools that makes that possible."
The researchers expect scientists will use gas biosensors in the lab to
study nitrogen fixing in agriculture, antibiotic exchange in wastewater
treatment, gene transfer in conditions where nutrients are scarce and
the relationship between gene expression in soil and the release of
greenhouse gases.
"There are other technologies that will build on this," said Silberg, an
associate professor of biochemistry and cell biology. "The idea of
using gases opens up most anything that's genetically encoded. However,
we do need to improve technologies for some of the subtler kinds of
questions."
He said releasing and sensing methyl halide gas represented an easy
proof of concept. "Now we want higher-resolution information about other
types of biological events by creating more sophisticated genetic
programs using synthetic biology," Silberg said.
They expect they will soon be able to test agricultural soil samples to
help fine-tune crop growth through more efficient watering and
fertilizer use. "How can agriculture get this extra level of efficiency
without the waste? Lots of people are coming to that, and there are lots
of ways to do it," he said. "We're trying to build high-tech tools that
allow us to understand mechanisms to make reliable predictions. That's
the long game with these tools."
The researchers emphasized that these are tools for soil studies within
lab environments. The synthetic microbes are destroyed once the results
are obtained.
The Rice lab tested soil samples from the National Science Foundation's
Kellogg Biological Station Long-Term Ecological Research Site in
Michigan after adding Escherichia coli bacteria programmed to release
gas upon transfer of their DNA to another microbe. Signals from the gas
were up to 10,000 times the lab's detection limit.
The gas sensors were effective in anoxic—or oxygen-depleted—conditions,
unlike green fluorescent protein, which requires oxygen to work. It is
anticipated the reporter proteins can be used in many kinds of soil
microbes, and some are currently being tested, Bennett said.
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