Engineering Phages for Eukaryotic Payload Expression in Cancer Associated Fusobacterium Nucleatum
International Conference on Microbiome Engineering
2021
4th International Conference on Microbiome Engineering (ICME)
General Submissions
Oral Session
Fusobacterium nucleatum (FN) species are enriched in human colorectal tumors [1] and their presence is correlated with poor prognosis [2]. Bacteriophage ("phage") have high intrinsic safety and specificity and offer a promising treatment strategy to target FN associated with colorectal cancer (CRC). Phage engineering allows specific delivery of anti-tumor immune stimulating payloads. A major obstacle in phage engineering is to express eukaryotic payloads in unconventional prokaryotic bacterial hosts, such as FN, while ensuring high expression and activity.
To address these challenges, a de novo molecular system was established. Initially, a shuttle vector was generated using a native FN plasmid. Two promoters that drive strong bacterial gene expression in FN were identified using both bioinformatic tools and mass spectrometry and their activity was validated using a luciferase-based detection tag.
Payload protein expression was further improved using various algorithms for exposing the ribosome binding site and optimizing codon usage and ribosome elongation speed. After determining the optimal conditions for payload expression via a plasmid, a FN phage was engineered to carry the payload within its genome. Following phage infection, payload expression by the bacterial host was observed.