Team:Washington/Gram Negative
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Revision as of 07:58, 16 October 2010
New and Effective Killer of Gram-Negative Bacteria
As time passes, it is becoming increasingly apparent that the old generation of small molecule antibiotics are becoming out dated. Pathogens are continually evolving resistance to currently used antibiotics, and the discovery or modification of antibiotic treatments are slow to catch up. This continual evolution is causing the antibiotics to be less effective if not completely futile. Another problem with these antibiotics is that they do no differentiate between pathogenic and non-pathogenic bacteria; they kill both. There are many common diseases caused by gram-negative bacteria which inhabit the human gut, such as, but not limited to:Vibrio cholerae(cholera), Shigella (dysentary), and Salmonella (food poisoning). When these diseases are contracted antibiotics are most often given in hopes that they will kill the pathogenic bacteria. Quite often these antibiotics can cause a diverse range of side effects because they also end up killing other bacteria found naturally in the gut. Most of the bacteria in the gut is actually helpful. It aids the body in digestion, production of vitamins such as vitamin K, and competitively excludes pathogenic invaders. Both the problems of resistance and non-specificity could be lessened by an antibacterial agent that selectively kills pathogenic bacteria. This would limit the chance of the development of resistance by limiting exposure, and would drastically decrease damage to the helpful gut flora. The goal of this project is to turn the Tse2/Type VI secretion system, toxin/injection system, into a probiotic that specifically targets pathogenic gram-negative bacteria and is activated only when that specific bacteria is present.
The Type VI Secretion System
The T6SS (Type VI Secretion System) is an injection mechanism found in many (such asPseudomonas aeruginosa), but not all gram-negative bacteria. E.Coli is one bacteria that does not contain the T6SS. Since E.Coli is a common gram-negative bacteria found naturally in the gut it seemed only logical to move the T6SS into it. The T6SS acts much like a spear by physically puncturing the cell membrane. It also provides a channel through which proteins can be inserted into the punctured cell. The T6SS is physically incapable of puncturing the cell membrane of gram-positive bacteria, or the cell membrane of eukaryotic cells. This makes the T6SS a perfect candidate for a probiotic because it is unable to harm human cells and helpful gram-positive bacteria.
Tse2/ Tsi2 toxin/antitoxin system
In Pseudomonas aeruginosa, one of the major proteins secreted by the Type VI Secretion System is the toxic protein Tse2. Normally, Tse2 forms a complex with Tsi2, a protien coexpressed with Tse2 that serves as an antitoxin. Before Tse2 is secreted into the target cell, Tsi2 unbinds with Tse2, and Tse2 is secreted into the target cell by the Type VI Secretion System. The presence of Tse2 without the presence of Tsi2 causes the target cell to die. By activating Tse2 and Tsi2 production only when a pathogen is present, we could make it so that our probiotic only kills gram(-) cells when a specific gram (-) pathogen is present.