Uncovering novel endolysins against methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus using microbial single-cell genome sequencing

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Abstract

Endolysins, peptidoglycan hydrolases derived from bacteriophages (phages), are being developed as a promising alternative to conventional antibiotics. To obtain highly active endolysins, a diverse library of endolysins is vital. We here propose microbial single-cell genome sequencing as an efficient tool to discover dozens of previously unknown endolysins, owing to its culture-independent sequencing method. As a proof-of-concept, we analyzed and recovered endolysin genes within prophage regions of Staphylococcus single-amplified genomes (SAGs) in human skin microbiome samples. We constructed a library of chimeric endolysins by shuffling domains of the natural endolysins and performed high-throughput screening against Staphylococcus aureus . One of the lead endolysins, bbst1027, exhibited desirable antimicrobial properties such as rapid bactericidal activity, no detectable resistance development, and in vivo efficacy. We foresee that this endolysin discovery pipeline is in principle applicable to any bacterial target, and boost the development of novel antimicrobial agents.

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  1. Thank you so much for your thorough paper on endolysins! I enjoyed reading your work. I think your approach to identify endolysins using single-amplified genomes is very promising! I was wondering if you have considered testing the lytic activity of the identified EADs without fusing them to any CBD? There are likely many EADs that would exhibit potent cell lysis even without a CBD. Although the CBD may help with substrate specificity of the endolysin, EADs themselves also have a cell wall recognition capacity. That would be also interesting to test - is there a big change in the substrate specificity when an EAD alone is compared to an EAD-CBD fusion? Thank you so much for your time!