(725d) Engineering Synergistic Interactions between Antibiotics and Sequence-Specific Gene Expression Treatment to Re-Sensitize Multi-Drug Resistant Bacteria
AIChE Annual Meeting
2018
2018 AIChE Annual Meeting
Food, Pharmaceutical & Bioengineering Division
Synthetic Biology Applications
Thursday, November 1, 2018 - 4:24pm to 4:42pm
Just as two antibiotics can interact synergistically, the introduction of either genetic or epigenetic changes alongside standard drug treatments can elicit similar synergistic responses. Numerous CRISPR technologies have been developed to rapidly and efficiently affect such genetic and epigenetic changes. A thorough understanding of the potential synergy (and antagonism) between such modifications and available antibiotics would prove indispensable as it would serve as a powerful guiding force for the design of novel sequence-specific therapies to complement our current arsenal of antimicrobials.
Here, we establish a framework for interrogating such gene-drug synergy by employing gene knockouts and CRISPR interference of bacterial genes. We systematically explored the interactions between 30 specific gene knockouts and nine commonly used antibiotics, and show how this approach can be employed to rapidly characterize synergistic (and antagonistic) interactions. We extend these results to the gene expression landscape, and demonstrate how employing deactivated CRISPR-Cas9 constructs to selectively inhibit gene expression replicated these synergistic interactions during simultaneous antibiotic exposure. We show how this synergy potentiates antibiotic activity in an infection model, significantly reducing the bacterial load in HeLa cells infected with Salmonella enterica serovar Typhimurium. Finally, we demonstrate that such perturbations can be used to re-sensitize clinically isolated multi-drug resistant bacteria to antibiotic treatment. This uses an alternative, clinically relevant gene perturbation approach based on Peptide Nucleic Acids, or PNAs.
These results demonstrate a new pipeline for finding and designing optimal sequence-specific drug targets that potentiate the activity of existing treatments. Synergy between gene-drug treatments can profoundly impact the ability of microorganisms to escape therapy, and these results highlight the efficacy of these strategies to combat the spread of antibiotic resistance