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Directed evolution of TetR for constructing sensitive and broad-spectrum tetracycline antibiotics whole-cell biosensor.

Antibiotic abuse is the main reason for the drug resistance of pathogenic bacteria, posing a potential health risk. Antibiotic surveillance is critical for preventing antibiotic contamination. This study aimed to develop a sensitive and broad-spectrum whole-cell biosensor for tetracycline antibiotics (TCs) detection. Wild-type TCs-responsive biosensor was constructed by introducing a tetracycline operon into a sfGFP reporter plasmid. Using error-prone PCR, mutation libraries containing approximately 107 variants of the tetracycline repressor (TetR) gene were generated. The tigecycline-senstive mutants were isolated using high-throughput flow cytometric sorting. After 2 rounds of directed evolution, a mutant epS2-22 of TerR was isolated and assembled as a TCs biosensor. The epS2-22 biosensor was more sensitive and broad-spectrum than the wild-type biosensors. The detection limits of the epS2-22 biosensor for seven TCs were 4- to 62-fold lower than the wild-type biosensor (no response to tigecycline). Meanwhile, the epS2-22 biosensor had a shorter detection time and a stronger signal output than the wild type. In addition, the evolved epS2-22 biosensor showed excellent performance in detecting low traces of TCs in environmental water. These results suggest that directed evolution is a powerful tool for developing high-performance whole-cell biosensors, and the evolved epS2-22 biosensors have the potential for wider applications in real-world TCs detection.

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