Function-based probes for environmental microbiome analysis and methods of making and using the same

US11169152B2 · US · B2

Patent metadata
FieldValue
Publication numberUS-11169152-B2
Application numberUS-201816132266-A
CountryUS
Kind codeB2
Filing dateSep 14, 2018
Priority dateSep 15, 2017
Publication dateNov 9, 2021
Grant dateNov 9, 2021

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Abstract

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Probe embodiments for identifying analytes involved in biofuel or bioenergy production, bioremediation, or nutrient cycling as well as methods of making and use are described herein. In some embodiments, probes identifying cellulose degradation and/or sugar transport, lignin or chitin degradation, or peptide or toxin metabolism are included. In some embodiments, probes for identifying analytes in a soil sample are included in the compositions and methods disclosed herein.

First claim

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We claim: 1. A probe having a structure satisfying a formula selected from: wherein the linker is an aliphatic group, a heteroaliphatic group, an aromatic group, an aliphatic-aromatic group, a heteroaliphatic-aromatic group, a heteroaromatic group, an aliphatic-heteroaromatic group, a heteroaliphatic-heteroaromatic group, or a bi-functional linker; pTag is an azide or an alkyne or Tag is a detectable moiety; each R independently is hydrogen, aliphatic, or a protecting group; R′ is hydrogen, aliphatic, heteroaliphatic, or aromatic; and n is a integer selected from 2 to 10. 2. The probe of claim 1 , wherein the bi-functional linker is selected from: wherein R is hydrogen, aliphatic, heteroaliphatic, or aromatic; and n is an integer ranging from 0 to 20. 3. The probe of claim 1 , wherein the probe is selected from: wherein each R independently is H, aliphatic, aromatic, or a combination of aliphatic and aromatic, or a counterion that balance a negative charge on the corresponding oxygen atom. 4. A kit, comprising: a substrate; and a probe having a structure satisfying a formula selected from wherein the linker is a bi-functional linker comprising an anchor group; pTag is an azide or alkyne or Tag is a detectable moiety; each R independently is hydrogen, aliphatic, or a protecting group; R′ is hydrogen, aliphatic, heteroaliphatic, or aromatic; and n is a integer selected from 2; to 10 and wherein the substrate comprises a surface modified with a functional group configured to covalently bind with the anchor group of the probe. 5. The kit of claim 4 , wherein the surface of the substrate is modified with an azide or an alkyne and wherein the anchor group is an azide or an alkyne and the substrate is covalently bound to the probe by a triazole ring formed between the azide or the alkyne of the substrate and the alkyne or the azide, respectively, of the anchor group of the probe. 6. The kit of claim 4 , wherein the substrate is a glass plate, a glass well-plate, a glass rod, or a glass microsphere. 7. The kit of claim 4 , wherein the probe comprises a pTag group and the kit further comprises a reagent comprising a detectable moiety configured to covalently bind with the pTag group. 8. A method, comprising exposing a sample to the probe of claim 1 to label at least one analyte present in the sample with the probe thereby forming a probe-analyte conjugate. 9. The method of claim 8 , wherein the method further comprises: (i) exposing the sample to an energy source to promote formation of the probe-analyte conjugate; (ii) exposing the sample to a reagent comprising a detectable moiety configured to covalently bind with a pTag group of the probe; (iii) sorting or isolating the probe-analyte conjugate or a microbe comprising the probe-analyte conjugate; (iv) identifying the analyte or the microbe with the probe-analyte conjugate; or (v) any combination of (i)-(iv). 10. A method of altering microbial metabolism in an environment, comprising: exposing a sample from the environment to the probe of claim 1 ; allowing the probe to interact with at least one microbial protein present in the sample, wherein the at least one microbial protein comprises at least one specific metabolic function; determining the presence of the at least one microbial protein in the sample that is bound to the probe; evaluating the activity of the at least one microbial protein bound to the probe; and altering microbial metabolism in the environment by: enriching the environment with the at least one microbial protein or a microbe containing the at least one microbial protein; reducing the amount of the at least one microbial protein or an amount of a microbe containing the at least one microbial protein in the environment; increasing the at least one specific metabolic function; or reducing the at least one specific metabolic function. 11. The method of claim 10 , wherein the at least one specific metabolic function comprises nutrient cycling, bioremediation, or producing biofuel or bioenergy; and wherein the at least one microbial protein is a cellulase, hemicellulase, xylanase, glucosidase, sulfatase, phosphatase, protease, lytic polysaccharide monooxygenase (LPMO), or chitinase. 12. A method, comprising exposing a sample to the kit of claim 4 to label at least one analyte present in the sample with the probe of the kit thereby forming a probe-analyte conjugate. 13. The method of claim 12 , wherein the method further comprises: (i) exposing the sample to an energy source to promote formation of the probe-analyte conjugate; (ii) exposing the sample to a reagent comprising a detectable moiety configured to covalently bind with a pTag group of the probe; (iii) sorting or isolating the probe-analyte conjugate or a microbe comprising the probe-analyte conjugate; (iv) identifying the analyte or the microbe with the probe-analyte conjugate; or (v) any combination of (i)-(iv). 14. A method of altering microbial metabolism in an environment, comprising: exposing a sample from the environment to the kit of claim 4 ; allowing the probe to interact with at least one microbial protein present in the sample, wherein the at least one microbial protein comprises at least one specific metabolic function; determining the presence of the at least one microbial protein in the sample that is bound to the probe; evaluating the activity of the at least one microbial protein bound to the probe; and altering microbial metabolism in the environment by: enriching the environment with the at least one microbial protein or a microbe containing the at least one microbial protein; reducing the amount of the at least one microbial protein or an amount of a microbe containing the at least one microbial protein in the environment; increasing the at least one specific metabolic function; or reducing the at least one specific metabolic function. 15. The method of claim 14 , wherein the at least one specific metabolic function comprises nutrient cycling, bioremediation, or producing biofuel or bioenergy. 16. The method of claim 14 , wherein the at least one microbial protein is a cellulase, hemicellulase, xylanase, glucosidase, sulfatase, phosphatase, protease, lytic polysaccharide monooxygenase (LPMO), or chitinase. 17. A probe having a structure satisfying a formula selected fr

Assignees

Inventors

Classifications

  • C07H15/203Primary

    Monocyclic carbocyclic rings other than cyclohexane rings; Bicyclic carbocyclic ring systems · CPC title

  • involving glucose or galactose · CPC title

  • Bacteria · CPC title

  • Assays, e.g. immunoassays or enzyme assays, involving carbohydrates · CPC title

  • acting on hydrogen peroxide as acceptor (1.11) · CPC title

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What does patent US11169152B2 cover?
Probe embodiments for identifying analytes involved in biofuel or bioenergy production, bioremediation, or nutrient cycling as well as methods of making and use are described herein. In some embodiments, probes identifying cellulose degradation and/or sugar transport, lignin or chitin degradation, or peptide or toxin metabolism are included. In some embodiments, probes for identifying analytes …
Who is the assignee on this patent?
Battelle Memorial Institute
What technology area does this patent fall under?
Primary CPC classification C07H15/203. Mapped technology areas include Chemistry & Metallurgy.
When was this patent published?
Publication date Tue Nov 09 2021 00:00:00 GMT+0000 (Coordinated Universal Time) (B2). Legal status and post-grant events are not shown on this page.
What related patents are in patentsdb?
We list 8 related publications on this page (citations in our corpus or others sharing the same primary CPC).