Toxin-antitoxin (TA) systems are genetic elements that encode a relatively stable toxin and a labile antitoxin. In the case of type I systems, the toxin is a short membrane or cytosolic protein which exhibits cytostatic or cytotoxic activity while the antitoxin is a short non-coding RNA which binds to the toxin mRNA and thus prevents its translation. The notorious bloom-forming cyanobacteria Microcystis aeruginosa is especially interesting in terms of TA systems as it contains the highest number of type II TA loci of any bacteria, according to the TADB 2.0 database. Despite this, TA systems od M. aeruginosa remain poorly understood as only one type II system has been experimentally studied up to now while type I TA systems were not found in this species so far.
In this thesis, we aimed to find putative type I TA systems in M. aeruginosa and to characterize them experimentally. We performed a bioinformatic analysis in which we searched the M. aeruginosa PCC 7806 genome for candidate loci using a set of search parameters based on characteristics of known type I loci. We found fifteen candidate type I TA loci and experimentally characterized six of them, namely BH695_0311, BH695_0320, BH695_3336, BH695_4017, BH695_4989, and BH695_5020.
We prepared expression vectors carrying sequences for candidate type I toxins and used them to transform Escherichia coli BL21(DE3) pLysS cells. The effect of candidate toxin expression on cell growth was then tested by measuring OD600. Our results show that the expression of BH695_0320 and BH695_4017 has a negative effect on cell growth while the expression of the remaining candidate toxins has no effect. We continued our research focusing on the BH695_4017/MaT1A_4017 pair, which we renamed to MsoT1/MsoA1. By performing an immunodetection assay and a cell viability assay using erythrosin B, we were able to confirm the expression as well as the toxicity of MsoT1. Additionally, we found the expression of MsoT1 to have a delayed toxic effect when the cognate candidate antitoxin MsoA1 is also present on the vector.
We concluded the research by constructing synthetic-biology vectors carrying the seqeunce for either ß-lactamase or mRFP under the MsoA1 candidate antitoxin promoters. By monitoring E. coli BL21(DE3) cell growth in media containing different concentrations of the antibiotic ampicillin and by measuring mRFP fluorescence, we were able to detect the expression of the two reporter proteins under the control of the PmsoA1 promoters, thus indirectly proving the expression of the MsoA1 antitoxin.
The results of this thesis indicate MsoT1/MsoA1 to be a novel type I toxin-antitoxin family as well as the first type I system to be discovered in cyanobacteria.
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