Genomically Mined Acoustic Reporter Genes Enable In Vivo Monitoring of Tumors and Tumor-Homing Bacteria

biorxiv(2021)

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摘要
A major outstanding challenge in the fields of biological research, synthetic biology and cell-based medicine is the difficulty of visualizing the function of natural and engineered cells noninvasively inside opaque organisms. Ultrasound imaging has the potential to address this challenge as a widely available technique with a tissue penetration of several centimeters and spatial resolution below 100 um. Recently, the first genetically encoded acoustic reporters were developed based on bacterial gas vesicles to link ultrasound signals to molecular and cellular function. However, the properties of these first-generation acoustic reporter genes (ARGs) resulted in limited sensitivity and specificity for imaging in the in vivo context. Here, we describe second-generation ARGs with greatly improved acoustic properties and expression characteristics, identified through a phylogenetic screen of candidate gene clusters from diverse bacteria and archaea. The resulting constructs offer major qualitative and quantitative improvements, including much stronger ultrasound contrast, the ability to produce nonlinear signals distinguishable from background tissue, and stable long-term expression. We demonstrate the utility of these next-generation ARGs by imaging in situ gene expression in mouse models of breast cancer and tumor-homing probiotic bacteria, revealing the unique spatial distributions of tumor growth and colonization by therapeutic cells noninvasively in living subjects. ### Competing Interest Statement The authors have declared no competing interest.
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