Issue 22, 2020

A novel universal nano-luciferase-involved reporter system for long-term probing food-borne probiotics and pathogenic bacteria in mice by in situ bioluminescence imaging

Abstract

Food-borne bacteria have received increasing attention due to their great impact on human health. Bioimaging makes it possible to monitor bacteria inside the living body in real time and in situ. Nano-luciferase (NLuc) as a new member of the luciferase family exhibits superior properties than the commonly used luciferases, including small size, high stability and improved luminescence. Herein, NLuc, CBRLuc and FLuc were well expressed in varied food-borne bacteria. Results showed that the signal intensity of E. coli-NLuc was about 41 times higher than E. coli-CBRLuc, L. plantarum-NLuc was nearly 227 times that of L. plantarum-FLuc in vitro. Moreover, NLuc was applied to trace L. plantarum and E. coli in vivo through the whole body and separated digestive tract imaging, as well as the feces bacterium counting and probing. The persistence of bioluminescent strains was predominantly localized in colon and cecum of mice after oral administration. The NLuc system showed its incomparable superiority, especially in the application of intestinal imaging and the universality for food-borne bacteria. We demonstrated that the NLuc system was a brilliant alternative for specific application of food-borne bacteria in vivo, aiming to collect more accurate and real-time information of food-borne bacteria from the living body for further investigation of their damage mechanism and nutrition effect.

Graphical abstract: A novel universal nano-luciferase-involved reporter system for long-term probing food-borne probiotics and pathogenic bacteria in mice by in situ bioluminescence imaging

Supplementary files

Article information

Article type
Paper
Submitted
10 Feb 2020
Accepted
23 Mar 2020
First published
31 Mar 2020
This article is Open Access
Creative Commons BY-NC license

RSC Adv., 2020,10, 13029-13036

A novel universal nano-luciferase-involved reporter system for long-term probing food-borne probiotics and pathogenic bacteria in mice by in situ bioluminescence imaging

N. Zhao, J. Liu, S. Liu, X. Ji, H. Lv, Y. Hu, Z. Wang, S. Lv, C. Li and S. Wang, RSC Adv., 2020, 10, 13029 DOI: 10.1039/D0RA01283A

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