July 26, 2024
Journal Article

Using methyl bromide for interspecies cell-cell signaling and as a reporter in a model soil consortium

Abstract

Synthetic microbial communities are emerging as model systems for studying consortia-scale phenotypes. To establish synthetic biology tools for studying these communities in hard-to-image environmental materials, we evaluated whether a single member of a model soil consortium (MSC) can be programmed to report on gene expression without requiring matrix disruption. For these studies, we targeted a five member MSC that includes Dyadobacter fermentans, Ensifer adhaerens, Rhodococcus sp003130705, Streptomyces sp001905665, and Variovorax beijingensis. By coupling the expression of a methyl halide transferase to a constitutive promoter, we show that Variovorax beijingensis can be programmed to synthesize methyl halides that accumulate in the soil headspace at levels that are =24-fold higher than all other MSC members across a range of environmentally-relevant hydration conditions. We find that methyl halide production can report on a MSC promoter that is activated by changes in water potential, and we demonstrate that a synthetic gas signal can be read out directly using gas chromatography and indirectly using a soil-derived Methylorubrum that is programmed to produce a visual output in response to methyl halides. These tools will be useful for future studies that investigate how MSC respond to dynamic hydration conditions, such as drought and flood events induced by climate change, which can alter soil water potential and induce the release of stored carbon.

Published: July 26, 2024

Citation

Kim J., L. Lu, X. Gao, K.S. Hofmockel, C.A. Masiello, and J. Silberg. 2023. Using methyl bromide for interspecies cell-cell signaling and as a reporter in a model soil consortium. ACS Synthetic Biology 12, no. 12:3743–3753. PNNL-SA-190282. doi:10.1021/acssynbio.3c00559