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Abstract AimsTo determine if the bacteriophage abortive infection system ToxIN is present in foodborne Salmonella and if it protects against infection by bacteriophages specific to enteric bacteria. Methods and resultsA set of foodborne Salmonella enteritidis isolates from a 2010 eggshell outbreak was identified via BLASTN (basic local alignment search tool nucleotide) queries as harboring a close homolog of ToxIN, carried on a plasmid with putative mobilization proteins. This homolog was cloned into a plasmid vector and transformed into the laboratory strain Salmonella typhimurium LT2 and tested against a set of Salmonella-specific phages (FelixO1, S16, Sp6, LPST153, and P22 HT105/1 int-201). ToxIN reduced infection by FelixO1, S16, and LPST153 by ∼1–4 log PFU ml−1 while reducing the plaque size of Sp6. When present in LT2 and Escherichia coli MG1655, ToxIN conferred cross-genus protection against phage isolates, which infect both bacteria. Finally, the putative ToxIN plasmid was found in whole-genome sequence contigs of several Salmonella serovars, pathogenic E. coli, and other pathogenic enterobacteria. ConclusionsSalmonella and E. coli can resist infection by several phages via ToxIN under laboratory conditions; ToxIN is present in foodborne pathogens including Salmonella and Shiga-toxigenic E. coli.more » « less
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Abstract Bacteriophages constitute an invaluable biological reservoir for biotechnology and medicine. The ability to exploit such vast resources is hampered by the lack of methods to rapidly engineer, assemble, package genomes, and select phages. Cell-free transcription-translation (TXTL) offers experimental settings to address such a limitation. Here, we describe PHage Engineering by In vitro Gene Expression and Selection (PHEIGES) using T7 phage genome and Escherichia coli TXTL. Phage genomes are assembled in vitro from PCR-amplified fragments and directly expressed in batch TXTL reactions to produce up to 1011PFU/ml engineered phages within one day. We further demonstrate a significant genotype-phenotype linkage of phage assembly in bulk TXTL. This enables rapid selection of phages with altered rough lipopolysaccharides specificity from phage genomes incorporating tail fiber mutant libraries. We establish the scalability of PHEIGES by one pot assembly of such mutants with fluorescent gene integration and 10% length-reduced genome.more » « less
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We isolated and characterized the novel polyvalent T-even type bacteriophage vB_SenS_Jbel from wastewater using an enrichment of three different Salmonella strains. The vB_SenS_Jbel virions have prolate icosahedral capsids approximately 100 nm long and 80 nm wide. The genome consists of linear, double-stranded DNA that is 165,566 bp long. Analysis of the genome and structure of vB_SenS_Jbel indicates that it belongs to the genus Tequatrovirus of the family Straboviridae. This novel polyvalent phage can infect Escherichia coli and multiple Salmonella and Shigella species through its unique tail fiber structure.more » « lessFree, publicly-accessible full text available March 1, 2026
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NA (Ed.)Phage-based biocontrol of foodborne Salmonella is limited by the requisite use of Salmonella to propagate the phages. This limitation can be circumvented by producing Salmonella phages using a cell-free gene expression system (CFE) with a non-pathogenic chassis. Here, we produce the Salmonella phage felixO1 using an E. coli-based CFE system.more » « less
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Walker, John M (Ed.)Cell-free transcription-translation (TXTL) enables achieving an ever-growing number of applications, ranging from the rapid characterization of DNA parts to the production of biologics. As TXTL systems gain in versatility and efficacy, larger DNAs can be expressed in vitro extending the scope of cell-free biomanufacturing to new territories. The demonstration that complex entities such as infectious bacteriophages can be synthesized from their genomes in TXTL reactions opens new opportunities, especially for biomedical applications. Over the last century, phages have been instrumental in the discovery of many ground-breaking biotechnologies including CRISPR. The primary function of phages is to infect bacteria. In that capacity, phages are considered an alternative approach to tackling current societal problems such as the rise of antibiotic-resistant microbes. TXTL provides alternative means to produce phages and with several advantages over in vivo synthesis methods. In this chapter, we describe the basic procedures to purify phage genomes, cell-free synthesize phages, and quantitate them using an all-E. coli TXTL system.more » « less
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