Phage Infection
What are Bacteriophages?
Bacteriophages (phages) are viruses that selectively infect bacteria. Phages transport their genome from cell-to-cell using protein-based particles known as
How Did We Use Them?
In our project, we take advantage of a phage’s ability to package and transport genes between bacterial cells while avoiding real viral infection. For the initial delivery to a target population, we use a modified form of the bacteriophage M13 to package and transport the plasmid encoding our gene-elimination mechanism. M13 phage is a filamentous, single-stranded DNA virus that infects E. coli that possess pili [2]. We plan to use this phage because we expect that it can infect both the DH5α F’-mcherry E. coli in our mcherry model and E. coli O157:H7 for our future application, as they both have F or F-like pili.
Creating Our Pseudovirion Delivery Vector
The construction of the
Creating the Viral Delivery System
To construct the viral delivery system containing our synthetic genes, we will transform DH5α F’ cells with our phagemid and then infect them with M13KO7 helper phage. We will concentrate the viral particles secreted from helper phage-containing cells to then infect and deliver our gene disruption mechanism to our target E. coli.