Periodic Reporting for period 4 - MYCOCHASSIS (Engineering of a minimal bacterial therapeutic chassis)
Période du rapport: 2020-05-01 au 2021-10-31
Here we propose to rationally engineer the mildly human lung pathogen M. pneumoniae, for animal and human therapy that will deliver therapies to diseased human lungs.
Importance for society:
Current treatments of many diseases use chemical drugs. Those in many cases are effective but they are inert from the point of view that they cannot react to changes in the human body. On the other hand living systems like bacteria if harnessed, they could interact with the human physiology responding to the needs of the patient and delivering locally and continuously one or more active compounds. Evidently, this is easier in human parts of the body open to the exterior, like mouth, nose, skin, digestive system, genital tracts, eyes and lungs where there is a reduced risk of general infection. Getting therapeutic bacteria could be a major step in personalized medicine and could allow targeting complex diseases which now are poorly treated
Overall Objectives:
Aim 1. Whole-cell modeling of the bacterium
Developing a whole-cell computational model based on organism-specific experimental data. This model will be used to minimize the genome and to make reliable predictions about the in vivo behavior of engineered components.
Aim 2. Engineering of the therapeutic chassis
Using the whole-cell model and deletion of non-essential genes we will create a non-pathogenic therapeutic chassis of M. pneumoniae with safety circuits to prevent uncontrolled growth in the host.
Aim3. Displaying proteins for lung and biofilm recognition and engineering of Biofilm dispersion capability
Using the therapeutic chassis we will engineer orthogonal gene circuits to secrete and dissolve in vitro biofilms caused by S. aureus and P. aeruginosa as well as do preliminary tests in mouse models.
Based on the results of the project we have filed patents :
patent application EP 20382261.4
patent application EP 20382288.7
patent application EP 20382207.7
and incorporated a start-up company Pulmobiotics (https://www.pulmobio.com/)
During the life cycle of the project we have disseminated the project and its results through the multiple and different communication channels available at the CRG, that is through press releases and pieces of web news, reaching a significant amount of media outlets which published the news, web pages with information and funding acknowledgements about the project, through social media channels, such as Twitter, Facebook, and LinkedIn. We also took the chance to explain the project in different public engagement activities, such as a virtual tour to Dr. Serrano lab and at a Public Dialogue carried out at institutional level. Dr. Serrano and his team have already disseminated project results in several workshops, conferences and seminars addressed to scientific/academic audiences.