Development of a Replication-Deficient Bacteriophage Reporter Lacking an Essential Baseplate Wedge Subunit

Viruses. 2023 Dec 20;16(1):8. doi: 10.3390/v16010008.

Abstract

Engineered bacteriophages (phages) can be effective diagnostic reporters for detecting a variety of bacterial pathogens. Although a promising biotechnology, the large-scale use of these reporters may result in the unintentional release of genetically modified viruses. In order to limit the potential environmental impact, the ability of these phages to propagate outside the laboratory was targeted. The phage SEA1 has been previously engineered to facilitate food safety as an accurate and sensitive reporter for Salmonella contamination. In this study, homologous recombination was used to replace the expression of an essential baseplate wedge subunit (gp141) in SEA1 with a luciferase, NanoLuc®. This reporter, referred to as SEA1Δgp141.NL, demonstrated a loss of plaque formation and a failure to increase in titer following infection of Salmonella. SEA1Δgp141.NL was thus incapable of producing infectious progeny in the absence of gp141. In contrast, production of high titer stocks was possible when gp141 was artificially supplied in trans during infection. As a reporter, SEA1Δgp141.NL facilitated rapid, sensitive, and robust detection of Salmonella despite an inability to replicate. These results suggest that replication-deficient reporter phages are an effective method to obtain improved containment without sacrificing significant performance or the ease of production associated with many phage-based diagnostic methods.

Keywords: Salmonella enterica; bacteriophage; baseplate wedge subunit; luciferase reporter phage; phage-based detection; replication-deficient phage; synthetic phage.

MeSH terms

  • Bacteria
  • Bacteriophages* / genetics
  • Salmonella / genetics

Grants and funding

This research received no external funding.