Cell-free transcription-translation (TXTL) enables achieving an ever-growing number of applications, ranging from the rapid characterization of DNA parts to the production of biologics. As TXTL systems gain in versatility and efficacy, larger DNAs can be expressed in vitro extending the scope of cell-free biomanufacturing to new territories. The demonstration that complex entities such as infectious bacteriophages can be synthesized from their genomes in TXTL reactions opens new opportunities, especially for biomedical applications. Over the last century, phages have been instrumental in the discovery of many ground-breaking biotechnologies including CRISPR. The primary function of phages is to infect bacteria. In that capacity, phages are considered an alternative approach to tackling current societal problems such as the rise of antibiotic-resistant microbes. TXTL provides alternative means to produce phages and with several advantages over in vivo synthesis methods. In this chapter, we describe the basic procedures to purify phage genomes, cell-free synthesize phages, and quantitate them using an all-E. coli TXTL system.
Keywords: Bacteriophages; E. coli; Kinetic infection assay; Spotting assay; TXTL (cell-free transcription-translation).
© 2024. The Author(s), under exclusive license to Springer Science+Business Media, LLC, part of Springer Nature.