Article

Increasing the bactofection capacity of a mammalian expression vector by removal of the f1 ori

Details

Citation

Johnson SA, Ormsby MJ, McIntosh A, Tait SWG, Blyth K & Wall DM (2018) Increasing the bactofection capacity of a mammalian expression vector by removal of the f1 ori. Cancer Gene Therapy, 26 (7), pp. 183-194. https://doi.org/10.1038/s41417-018-0039-9

Abstract
Bacterial-mediated cancer therapy has shown great promise in in vivo tumour models with increased survival rates post-bacterial treatment. Improving efficiency of bacterial-mediated tumour regression has focused on controlling and exacerbating bacterial cytotoxicity towards tumours. One mechanism that has been used to carry this out is the process of bactofection where post-invasion, bacteria deliver plasmid-borne mammalian genes into target cells for expression. Here we utilised the cancer-targeting Salmonella Typhimurium strain, SL7207, to carry out bactofection into triple negative breast cancer MDA-MB-231 cells. However, we noted that post-transformation with the commonly used mammalian expression vector pEGFP, S. Typhimurium became filamentous, attenuated and unable to invade target cells efficiently. Filamentation did not occur in Escherichia coli-transformed with the same plasmid. Further investigation identified the region inducing S. Typhimurium filamentation as being the f1 origin of replication (f1 ori), an artefact of historic use of mammalian plasmids for single stranded DNA production. Other f1 ori-containing plasmids also induced the attenuated phenotype, while removal of the f1 ori from pEGFP restored S. Typhimurium virulence and increased the bactofection capacity. This work has implications for interpretation of prior bactofection studies employing f1 ori-containing plasmids in S. Typhimurium, while also indicating that future use of S. Typhimurium in targeting tumours should avoid the use of these plasmids.

Keywords
Genetic vectors; Targeted therapies; Transfection

Journal
Cancer Gene Therapy: Volume 26, Issue 7

StatusPublished
FundersThe Wellcome Trust
Publication date31/07/2018
Publication date online13/08/2018
Date accepted by journal07/07/2018
URLhttp://hdl.handle.net/1893/33658
PublisherNature Publishing Group
ISSN0929-1903
eISSN1476-5500

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