In situ deposition of nanobodies by an engineered commensal microbe promotes survival in a mouse model of enterohemorrhagic E. coli

Author:

Srivastava Rajkamal12ORCID,González-Prieto Coral12,Lynch Jason P12,Muscolo Michele E1ORCID,Lin Catherine Y1ORCID,Brown Markus A12,Lemos Luisa12ORCID,Shrestha Anishma3,Osburne Marcia S3ORCID,Leong John M34ORCID,Lesser Cammie F1256ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Center for Bacterial Pathogenesis, Division of Infectious Diseases, Department of Medicine, Massachusetts General Hospital , MA 02115 , USA

2. Department of Microbiology, Blavatnik Institute, Harvard Medical School , Boston, MA 02115 , USA

3. Department of Molecular Biology and Microbiology, Tufts University School of Medicine , Boston, MA 02111 , USA

4. Tufts Stuart B Levy Center for Integrated Management of Antimicrobial Resistance, Tufts University , Boston, MA 02111 , USA

5. Broad Institute of MIT and Harvard , Cambridge, MA 02142 , USA

6. Ragon Institute of Harvard and MIT , Cambridge, MA 02139 , USA

Abstract

Abstract Engineered smart microbes that deliver therapeutic payloads are emerging as treatment modalities, particularly for diseases with links to the gastrointestinal tract. Enterohemorrhagic Escherichia coli (EHEC) is a causative agent of potentially lethal hemolytic uremic syndrome. Given concerns that antibiotic treatment increases EHEC production of Shiga toxin (Stx), which is responsible for systemic disease, novel remedies are needed. EHEC encodes a type III secretion system (T3SS) that injects Tir into enterocytes. Tir inserts into the host cell membrane, exposing an extracellular domain that subsequently binds intimin, one of its outer membrane proteins, triggering the formation of attaching and effacing (A/E) lesions that promote EHEC mucosal colonization. Citrobacter rodentium (Cr), a natural A/E mouse pathogen, similarly requires Tir and intimin for its pathogenesis. Mice infected with Cr(ΦStx2dact), a variant lysogenized with an EHEC-derived phage that produces Stx2dact, develop intestinal A/E lesions and toxin-dependent disease. Stx2a is more closely associated with human disease. By developing an efficient approach to seamlessly modify the C. rodentium genome, we generated Cr_Tir-MEHEC(ΦStx2a), a variant that expresses Stx2a and the EHEC extracellular Tir domain. We found that mouse precolonization with HS-PROT3EcT-TD4, a human commensal E. coli strain (E. coli HS) engineered to efficiently secrete an anti-EHEC Tir nanobody, delayed bacterial colonization and improved survival after challenge with Cr_Tir-MEHEC(ΦStx2a). This study suggests that commensal E. coli engineered to deliver payloads that block essential virulence determinants can be developed as a new means to prevent and potentially treat infections including those due to antibiotic resistant microbes.

Funder

NIH

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

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