The Establishment of a Tobramycin-Responsive Whole-Cell Micro-Biosensor Based on an Artificial Ribozyme Switch

Life (Basel). 2023 Jul 13;13(7):1553. doi: 10.3390/life13071553.

Abstract

In this study, a tobramycin concentration-dependent whole-cell micro-biosensor (tob-HHAz) was constructed by fusing a tobramycin aptamer with a hammerhead ribozyme (HHR) from Schistosoma mansoni. The biosensor was obtained by integrating all the modules into one complete RNA sequence, which was easily introduced into E. coli without suffering from harsh external environments. Three independent tobramycin-sensitive RNA structures were identified via high-throughput screening in vivo and were further verified in vitro to undergo the desired self-cleavage reaction. The computation prediction of the RNA structure was performed to help analyze the mechanisms of various conformations by performing a qualitative and rapid detection of tobramycin in practical samples; two sensors exhibited high responsiveness to spiked milk, with a detection limit of around 40 nM, which is below the EU's antibiotic maximum residual level. One of the structures provides a linear range from 30 to 650 nM with a minimum detection limit of 30 nM and showed relatively good selectivity in spiked urine. This study is the first in which in vivo screening was combined with computation analysis to optimize the pivotal structure of sensors. This strategy enables researchers to use artificial ribozyme-based biosensors not only for antibiotic detection but also as a generally applicable method for the further detection of substances in living cells.

Keywords: tobramycin; tobramycin-dependent hammerhead ribozyme-based aptazyme (tob-HHAz); whole-cell microbial sensor.