AU2002328340A1 - Nucleic acid free ghost preparations - Google Patents

Nucleic acid free ghost preparations

Info

Publication number
AU2002328340A1
AU2002328340A1 AU2002328340A AU2002328340A AU2002328340A1 AU 2002328340 A1 AU2002328340 A1 AU 2002328340A1 AU 2002328340 A AU2002328340 A AU 2002328340A AU 2002328340 A AU2002328340 A AU 2002328340A AU 2002328340 A1 AU2002328340 A1 AU 2002328340A1
Authority
AU
Australia
Prior art keywords
gene
bacterial
enzyme
lytic
ghosts
Prior art date
Legal status (The legal status is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the status listed.)
Granted
Application number
AU2002328340A
Other versions
AU2002328340B2 (en
Inventor
Wolfgang Haidinger
Werner Lubitz
Current Assignee (The listed assignees may be inaccurate. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation or warranty as to the accuracy of the list.)
Individual
Original Assignee
Individual
Priority date (The priority date is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the date listed.)
Filing date
Publication date
Application filed by Individual filed Critical Individual
Priority claimed from PCT/EP2002/007758 external-priority patent/WO2003006630A2/en
Publication of AU2002328340A1 publication Critical patent/AU2002328340A1/en
Application granted granted Critical
Publication of AU2002328340B2 publication Critical patent/AU2002328340B2/en
Anticipated expiration legal-status Critical
Ceased legal-status Critical Current

Links

Description

Nucleic acid free ghost preparations
Description
The invention relates to preparations of bacterial ghosts which are substantially free of living bacterial cells and/or nucleic acids and their use in pharmaceutical preparations.
Empty bacterial membranes, so-called bacterial ghosts, are prepared by controlled heterologous expression of a gene which effects a partial lysis of the cellular membrane of bacteria, particularly gram-negative bacteria (EP- A-0 291 021 ). For example, the lytic gene may be the bacteriophage PhiX1 74 gene E encoding a polypeptide which is inserted into the cell membrane complex of gram-negative bacteria and leads to the formation of a transmembrane tunnel structure through the inner and outer membrane. The inner diameter of this tunnel structure is in the range of about 40 to 1 ,000 nm. The cytoplasmic components may be liberated by means of this tunnel structure, wherein an empty cell membrane having an intact morphology, a so-called bacterial ghost, is obtained. The use of bacterial ghosts as dead vaccines or adjuvants and the preparation of recombinant bacterial ghosts carrying heterologous surface proteins in their membrane structures is disclosed in WO91 /1 3555 and WO93/01791 .
Although the lytic process leading to an empty membrane without cytoplasmic structures is quite effective, a certain amount, usually about one cell in 104 cells remains intact. In order to render even safer the use of bacterial ghosts as dead vaccines, particularly for applications in human medicine, it is necessary to provide ghost preparations, which contain a substantially lower number of living bacterial cells. Surprisingly, it was found that the efficiency of the lytic process for the preparation of bacterial ghosts may be increased by co-expression of the lytic gene together with a gene encoding an enzyme which is present and hydrolytically active in the cytoplasm of the cell, wherein said enzyme is capable of hydrolyzing cytoplasmic compounds necessary for non-limited function of the cell, wherein the enzyme is preferably selected from nucleases, phospholipases, lipases, lysozymes, proteases and carbohydrases. The expression of such enzymes is described in EP-B-0 635 061 . More preferably, the enzyme is a nuclease, particularly a truncated and/or mutated Staphylococcus aureus nuclease which is disclosed in WO95/1061 .
Regulated co-expression of a bacterial lysis gene, e.g. the bacteriophage PhiX174 gene E and a nuclease gene, results in an synergistic increase of efficiency of the lytic process and correspondingly in a substantial reduction of living bacterial cells in a ghost preparation.
Thus, a first aspect of the present invention relates to a preparation of bacterial ghosts, which is substantially free of living bacterial cells. Preferably, the ratio of ghosts to living cells (determined as CFU by plating) is at least 106:1 , more preferably at least 107: 1 , still more preferably at least 108: 1 , and most preferably at least 109: 1.
Further, the present invention relates to a preparation of bacterial ghosts, which is substantially free of nucleic acids, particularly substantially free of nucleic acids having a length of > 10 nucleotides. Preferably, no nucleic acid is detected by Real Time-PCR having a lower detection limit of about 1 -2 pg of DNA per 1 x 106, in particular per 2 x 106 ghosts and/or living or dead bacteria per ml. The Real Time-PCR is preferably carried out as described in Example 2 using suitable primers for a gene within the bacterial cell, e.g. an antibiotic resistance gene. Further, the invention relates to a pharmaceutical composition comprising a preparation of bacterial ghosts as described above and a pharmaceutically acceptable carrier, diluent and/or adjuvant. The composition is suitable as a vaccine or an adjuvant, e.g. an immunostimulating compound, which is used together with an immunogen against which an immune-reaction shall be raised. The composition is suitable for use in human medicine and veterinary medicine. Moreover, the ghosts may be used as carriers for therapeutic and diagnostic agents.
Preferably, the ghosts are derived from gram-negative bacteria, which may be selected e.g. from Escherichia coli, Klebsiella, Salmonella, Pseudomonas, Vibrio, Actinobacillus, Haemophilus, Pasteurella, Bordetella and Helicobacter. Furthermore, the ghosts may be recombinant ghosts, i.e. ghosts carrying heterologous proteins, e.g. immunogens, in the membrane.
The ghosts may be administered according to known procedures, e.g. orally, intranasally, intraocularly, topically or parenterally. Depending on the mode of administration the composition may be formulated as an injectable or aerogenally applicable solution or suspension, as an oral composition, e.g. as tablet, capsule or dragee, as cream or ointment. Furthermore, the composition may be formulated as a reconstitutable lyophilisate.
The ghost preparation of the invention may be prepared by a method comprising the steps:
(a) providing bacterial cells comprising
(i) a gene encoding a lytic protein capable of forming a tunnel structure in the bacterial membrane and
(ii) a gene encoding an enzyme capable of hydrolyzing cytoplasmic components in the bacterial cells, (b) optionally cultivating the bacterial cells under conditions, wherein the lytic gene and the enzyme gene are not expressed.
(c) subjecting the bacterial cells to conditions, wherein the lytic gene and the enzyme gene are expressed and the cytoplasmic components of the bacterial cells are degraded and liberated and
(d) obtaining the resulting bacterial ghosts.
Preferably, the lytic gene and the enzyme gene are in operative linkage with a regulatable expression control sequence. More preferably, the lytic gene and the enzyme gene are each in operative linkage with a separate, usually different regulatable expression control sequence.
Thus, the expression of both genes may be initiated separately, e.g. at different times of the cultivation procedure.
In a particularly preferred embodiment, the cells are cultivated under repressing conditions for both the lytic gene and the enzyme gene. Then, the expression of the enzyme is induced, e.g. when the enzyme gene is under control of a chemically regulatable promoter such as the lac promoter or a derivative thereof by adding an inducer, such as IPTG.
More preferably, the enzyme is expressed in a form which is at least partially inactive and which may be activated at a later stage by addition of a prosthetic group to the culture.
Then, subsequently, e.g. after 20 min up to 1 .5 h, particularly preferably after about 45 min, the expression of the lytic gene is induced, e.g. when the lytic gene is in operative linkage with a temperature-regulatable promoter, such as the lambda PR or PL promoter by a temperature shift to 42°C. Then, after about 30 min up to 2 h, e.g. at about 90 min, the enzyme is activated by adding a prosthetic group required for its function, e.g. metal ions, such as Mg2+ and/or Ca2+.
Further, the invention relates to a bacterial cell comprising (i) a gene encoding a lytic protein capable of forming a tunnel structure in a bacterial membrane and (ii) a gene encoding an enzyme capable of hydrolyzing cytoplasmic components in the bacterial cell. This cell may be used as a starting material in a method for obtaining a preparation of bacterial ghosts, which is substantially free of living cells and/or which is substantially free of nucleic acids, particularly substantially free of nucleic acids having a length of 10 nucleotides.
The lytic gene and/or the enzyme gene may be located on a vector, e.g. on the same vector or on different vectors. For example, the vector may be an extra-chromosomal plasmid having an origin of replication and a selection marker gene.
It should be noted that the disclosure of all patent documents recited in the specification above is incorporated herein by reference.
EXAMPLES
1. Preparation of bacterial ghosts using a combination of E lysis and nuclease treatment
1 .1 Material
The E.coli strain NM522 was used. The E.coli cells were transformed with the plasmid pML1 , which is a lysis plasmid carrying the PhiX174 gene E under control of a wild type lambda promoter and a kanamycin resistance gene, or pSNUCI , which is a nuclease plasmid carrying the snuc gene (Genbank V01281 , J01785, M10924; D. Shortle, Gene 22 (2-3), 181 -189 (1983)) under control of a lac promoter and an ampicillin resistance gene. 1 .2 Experimental design
The nuclease of the gram-positive bacterium Staphylococcus aureus is an enzyme which hydrolyzes nucleic acids due to its exonuclease and endonuclease activity. Experiments showed the combined expression of gene E and snuc increased the inactivation rate of ghosts and results in a reduced nucleic acid content.
1 .3 Two-vector systems
In these systems protein E and SNUC are encoded on two different expression plasmids. Actually two different systems were tested.
Best results were achieved using system 1 and following experimental design:
Overnight cultures of E.coli NM522 carrying plasmids pML1 and pSNUCI grown at 28°C with shaking were diluted in LB medium containing kanamycin and ampicillin to an OD600 about 0.05 to 0.08. Cultures were grown at 28°C with shaking to an OD600 about 0.25 to 0.3 (time-45). Then IPTG was added in a final concentration of 5 mM to induce expression of SNUC. 45 minutes later the cultures were shifted to 42°C (time 0) to induce expression of gene E. 90 minutes after shift (time 90) calcium ions and magnesium ions were added in final concentrations of 10 mM and 1 mM, respectively, to activate the enzymatic activity of SNUC.
OD600 was measured at time-45 and after that in intervals of 30 minutes starting at time 0 and CFU (colony forming units) were determined at the following times: -45, 0, 30, 60, 90, 120, 180, 240, 300, 360, 420, 480, 540, 600 and 1320. These experiments resulted in total inactivation of E.coli within 6 to 22 hours.
2. Measurement of DNA content in bacterial ghosts by Real Time-PCR
The residual DNA content was analyzed in the pellet as well as in the supernatant by agarose gel. In order to quantify the DNA content the concentration of kanamycin resistance gene and ampicillin resistance gene corresponding to the number of plasmids pSNUCI and pML1 , respectively, was measured by Real Time-PCR.
2.1 Devices and chemicals
Real Time Cycler: Corbett Research (distribution: genXpress Service & Vertrieb GmbH, Vienna, Austria)
Polymerase: Dynazyme (Finzyme) DNA-dye: SYBR-Green I 10,000 x (Molecular Probes) dNTPs: 10 mM each (Roche) 2.2 Mastermix for Real Time-PCR
2.3 Programs for PCR (Kan/Amp)
94°C 2 min
40 cycles: 94°C 28 sec
60°C for Kan (62°C for Amp) 1 min 72°C 1 min
4°C until the end fusion curve: 50°C - 96°C
Primer:
Kan-start: 5'-atgagccatattcaacgggaaa-3' Kan-stop: 5'-ttagaaaaactcatcgagcatca-3'
Amp-start: 5'-atgagtattcaacatttccgtgtc-3' Amp-stop: 5'-ttaccaatgcttaatcagtgagg-3' .4 DNA-Templates
Plasmid Standards
The plasmids pSNUCI and pML1 were prepared from overnight cultures (28°C/Amp or rather Kan) of E.coli NM522 via alkaline lysis and stored at 4°C after RNase-treatment in TE-buffer. The absolute DNA amounts of the plasmid standards were determined fluorimetrically: the standards were prepared from calf-thymus-DNA and after dyeing with the DNA-dye HOECHST 33342 (molecular probes) a calibrating plot was prepared. The plasmid standards were also treated with the dye and analyzed fluorometrically. From the calibration straight line the DNA-content in the plasmid samples could be determined.
pML1 : 0.32 μglμ\ pSNUCI : Λ 9 μglμ\
From these master-plasmid-standards the dilutions (up to 10"7) were produced in a TE-buffer.
Samples from lysed cultures
Every time 1 ml culture was taken and centrifuged. 0.5 ml of the supernatant were analyzed, the remainder thrown away.
The pellet (from 1 ml culture) was subjected to a total DNA preparation (Easy-DNA; Invitrogen) and the preparation added to 100 /I TE + RNase.
The supernatant (from 0.5 ml culture) was two times extracted with phenol/chloroform and precipitated with ethanol. The pellet was added to 50 μ\ TE + RNase.
In order to quantify the samples from lysed cultures the plasmid standards 10"2, 10"4 and 10"5, a zero control (without DNA template) and a number (10-12) of DNA samples were analyzed simultaneously. All of the samples (including zero-control and standards) were analyzed in a double batch via real time-PCR.
Each time 0.5 μ\ of the DNA-preparations were employed as templates.
After concentration values with regard to the genes to be quantified had been assigned to the plasmid standards, the quantification of the samples was performed completely automatically by the PCR- apparatus. DNA-samples, which led to an increase in the product yield in the real-time kinetics only after the standard 10"5, or provided no signal or one too weak, similar to the standards
10"6/10"7, were regarded as being "below the detection limit" when determining the concentration. 2.5 Real Time-PCR
The plasmid standards produced (dilutions 10"1 - 10~7) were analyzed by means of real time-PCR, in order to determine the detection limits. After analysis of the data of the Real Time-PCR- measurements and the fusion curves those dilutions of further analyses were excluded, which provided no signal or a signal too weak. Those fluorescence values were considered to be signals too "weak", which were derived from PCR-product-amounts that turned out to be smaller than the average plateau value of the higher standards, whereby the "correct" product (Kan/Amp) provided the smaller portion of the fluorescence signal.
At both standard curves a linear measurement range within the concentration range of 10"1 - 10"5 could be found.
Detection limits: pML1 : 1 .67 pg (0.5 μ\ in dilution 10"5) pSNUCI : 1 pg (0.5 μ\ in dilution 10"5)
3. FIGURES
Figure 1 shows the lysis kinetics after expression of the lysis gene E in E.coli NM522 (pMLI ).
Figure 2 shows the results of a real-time PCR (kanamycin resistance gene) in E.coli NM522 (pMLD cells.
Figure 3 shows the lysis kinetics after co-expression of lysis gene E and staphylococcal nuclease (SNUC) in E.coli NM522 (pML1 + pSNUC) .
Figures 4a and 4b show the results of a real-time PCR (kanamycin and ampicillin resistance gene) in E.coli NM522 (pML1 + pSNUC). From a comparison between Figures 1 and 2 (prior art) and the Figures 3 and 4 (present invention) it can be seen that by the co-expression of lytic gene and nuclease gene a surprising reduction of the living bacterial cells (expressed as CFU) and the nucleic acids (expressed as result of the real- time PCR) is obtained.
From this comparison the advantages achieved by the present invention can be clearly gathered.

Claims (18)

Claims
1 . A preparation of bacterial ghosts which is substantially free of living bacterial cells.
2. The preparation of claim 1 wherein the ratio of ghosts to living cells is at least 106: 1 .
3. The preparation of claim 2 wherein the ratio of ghosts to living cells is at least 108: 1 .
4. The preparation of bacterial ghosts which is substantially free of nucleic acids.
5. A pharmaceutical composition comprising the preparation of any one of claims 1 -4 and a pharmaceutically acceptable carrier, diluent and/or adjuvant.
6. The composition of claim 5 which is a vaccine.
7. The composition of claim 5 which is an adjuvant.
8. The composition of any one of claims 5-7 for use in human medicine.
9. The composition of any one of claims 5-7 for use in veterinary medicine.
1 0. A method for obtaining a preparation of bacterial ghosts of any one of claims 1 -4 comprising the steps: (a) providing bacterial cells comprising
(i) a gene encoding a lytic protein capable of forming a tunnel structure in the bacterial membranes and (ii) a gene encoding an enzyme capable of hydrolyzing cytoplasmic components in the bacterial cells,
(b) optionally cultivating the bacterial cells under conditions wherein the lytic gene and the enzyme gene are not expressed,
(c) subjecting the bacterial cells to conditions wherein the lytic gene and the enzyme gene are expressed and the cytoplasmic components of the bacterial cells are degraded and liberated and
(d) obtaining the resulting bacterial ghosts.
1 1 . The method of claim 10, wherein the gene encoding the lytic protein is the bacteriophage phiX174 gene E or a lytically active fragment thereof.
1 2. The method of claim 10 or 1 1 , wherein the gene encoding the hydrolytic enzyme is a nuclease gene.
1 3. The method of claim 1 2, wherein the nuclease is a truncated and/or mutated Staphylococcus aureus nuclease gene.
14. The method of any one of claims 10-13, wherein the lytic gene and the enzyme gene are in operative linkage with a regulatable expression control sequence.
15. The method of claim 14, wherein the lytic gene and the enzyme gene are each in operative linkage with a separate regulatable expression control sequence.
16. The method of claim 15, wherein the expression of the lytic gene and the expression of the enzyme are induced at different times.
17. A bacterial cell comprising
(i) a gene encoding a lytic protein capable of forming a tunnel structure in the bacterial membrane and (ii) a gene encoding an enzyme capable of hydrolyzing cytoplasmic components in the bacterial cell.
18. The cell of claim 17, wherein the lytic gene and/or enzyme gene are located on one or several vectors.
AU2002328340A 2001-07-11 2002-07-11 Nucleic acid free ghost preparations Ceased AU2002328340B2 (en)

Applications Claiming Priority (3)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
US30459501P 2001-07-11 2001-07-11
US60/304,595 2001-07-11
PCT/EP2002/007758 WO2003006630A2 (en) 2001-07-11 2002-07-11 Nucleic acid free ghost preparations

Publications (2)

Publication Number Publication Date
AU2002328340A1 true AU2002328340A1 (en) 2003-05-22
AU2002328340B2 AU2002328340B2 (en) 2007-06-28

Family

ID=23177160

Family Applications (1)

Application Number Title Priority Date Filing Date
AU2002328340A Ceased AU2002328340B2 (en) 2001-07-11 2002-07-11 Nucleic acid free ghost preparations

Country Status (8)

Country Link
US (1) US7399476B2 (en)
EP (1) EP1404808B1 (en)
AT (1) ATE462779T1 (en)
AU (1) AU2002328340B2 (en)
CA (1) CA2453518C (en)
DE (1) DE60235809D1 (en)
NZ (1) NZ530780A (en)
WO (1) WO2003006630A2 (en)

Families Citing this family (7)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
GB0614471D0 (en) 2006-07-20 2006-08-30 Syngenta Ltd Herbicidal Compounds
PT2240570E (en) * 2008-01-18 2014-02-17 Werner Lubitz Bacterial ghost (bg) production process using betapropiolactone (blp) for final inactivation
EP2485764A4 (en) 2009-10-09 2014-01-29 Childrens Medical Center Selectively disrupted whole-cell vaccine
PL2591798T3 (en) 2011-11-09 2015-04-30 Werner Lubitz Vaccine for use in tumor immunotherapy
EP3195878A1 (en) 2016-01-22 2017-07-26 Werner Lubitz Bacterial ghosts for the treatment of cancer
EP3700552A1 (en) 2017-10-25 2020-09-02 Allero Therapeutics BV Treatment of immune diseases by administration of antigen-specific formulations
CN112410360A (en) * 2021-01-18 2021-02-26 西南大学 Chicken pathogenic bacterium ghost and preparation method and application thereof

Family Cites Families (2)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US6177083B1 (en) * 1990-07-26 2001-01-23 Evax Technologies Gmbh Process for the production of vaccines and their use
NZ274482A (en) * 1993-10-13 1997-09-22 Gx Biosystems As Cells transformed with a truncated and/or mutated staphylococcus aureus nuclease and their use in immunological, pesticidal and environmental pollutant-degrading compositions

Similar Documents

Publication Publication Date Title
CN107208070B (en) Targeted elimination of bacterial genes
DE69233522T2 (en) HELP FOR THE REGULATION AND REFINING OF UREASE NECESSARY HELICOBAKTER PYLORI GENES AND THEIR USE
EP2240570B1 (en) Bacterial ghost (bg) production process using betapropiolactone (blp) for final inactivation
US20200109395A1 (en) Genetic systems that defend against foreign dna and uses thereof
KR101825439B1 (en) Method for preparing Gram positive bacteria ghosts by the treatment with hydrochloric acid
CN111788304A (en) Genetically engineered phage
KR100988771B1 (en) Novel Lysin Protein Having Killing Activity Specific to Enterococcus and Streptococcus
KR101164045B1 (en) Live attenuated vaccine against porcine pleuropneumonia
US7399476B2 (en) Nucleic acid free ghost preparations
AU2002328340A1 (en) Nucleic acid free ghost preparations
CN111378638A (en) Helicobacter pylori phage lyase and preparation method thereof
KR20140002463A (en) Diffocins and methods of use thereof
KR20230127308A (en) Novel nucleic acid-guided nucleases
CN109735477B (en) Preparation and application of three-gene deletion attenuated mutant strain of Listeria monocytogenes
KR20120073724A (en) Bacteriophage t10-1, my-1, and vegetable soft rot controlling composition containing the same
CN113637644B (en) Salmonella phage vB _ SalP _ TR2 and application thereof
KR20130020710A (en) Bacteriophage t10-1, my-1, and vegetable soft rot controlling composition containing the same
KR20150098058A (en) New Bacteriophage for Prevention and Treating the Chicken Escherichia coli and Antibacterial Compositions Containing the Same
US11179454B2 (en) Whole cell vaccines
WO2000077186A2 (en) Bacterial protection against stress
CN114478794A (en) Helicobacter pylori bacteriophage lysis system, expression and purification method and application thereof
KR20230053402A (en) Bacteriophage specific for pseudomonas resistant to antibiotics
KR101180419B1 (en) Combined vaccine against streptococcosis, vibriosis, tenacibaculosis
CN116949025A (en) Phenylalanine ammonia lyase mutant derived from candida nodosa and application thereof
CN116829712A (en) Phage-derived particles for in situ delivery of DNA payloads into propionibacterium acnes populations