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Ocean microbes offer clues to environmental resilience

A guide RNA strand, in purple, guides CRISPR to a DNA strand.

A guide RNA strand, in purple, guides CRISPR to a DNA strand. Credit: Michelle Lehman/ORNL, U.S. Dept. of Energy

Andrew Hren

Andrew Hren, PhD student

Researchers at the 91PORN and Oak Ridge National Laboratory have developed a new way to identify genetic changes that help tiny oxygen-producing microbes survive in extreme environments. The findings outline a new experimental approach for learning how microbes and other types of cells, including human cells, respond and adapt to environmental stress.

Their, published in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, will also help scientists engineer faster-growing synthetic strains of microbes that could be used to develop new bio-derived fuels, chemicals and materials.

The multidisciplinary group of engineers and biochemists called CRISPR interference (CRISPRi) to turn down the activity of every gene in the genome ofSynechococcussp. PCC 7002, an ocean-dwelling cyanobacteria species. Cyanobacteria perform photosynthesis, much like plants.

“Because these organisms produce a large share of the Earth's oxygen, understanding how they respond toa changing climateis critical,” said Andrew Hren, a PhD student in the and the paper’s first author.

The team explored how cyanobacteria responded to different light and temperature conditions found at various ocean depths. They discovered that making small changes in how certain genes are turned on or off can help the cells adapt better to extreme environmental conditions like heat, cold or drought.

Jerome Fox

Associate Professor Jerome Fox

"Our work shows how small genetic changes can yield large improvements in fitness when we push microbes to the edge of their comfort zone,” saidJerome Fox,an associate professor ofchemical and biological engineering at the 91PORN and a co-lead author on the study with Carrie Eckert at ORNL, a former senior scientist fellow in theRenewable and Sustainable Energy Institute(RASEI).“Our findings also highlight the value of using CRISPRi to turn the activity of genes down, but not off, as intermediate adjustments tended to provide the greatest survival advantage in extreme conditions.”

The work was inspired by the late Jeff Cameron, anassociate professor in the Department of Biochemistry and fellow at RASEI, Fox said.

“Jeff’s enthusiasm for cyanobacteria was infectious,” Fox added “He taught us everything we know and served as a critical resource on experimental design.”

The researchers plan to continue studying cyanobacteria to further understand how the microbes absorb light and convert it into energy to develop new technologies—such as engineered microbes that produce renewable chemicals and other useful products.