Jeffrey E Barrick and colleagues note that caffeine and related chemical compounds have become important water pollutants due to widespread use in coffee, soda pop, tea, energy drinks, chocolate and certain medications.
These include prescription drugs for asthma and other lung diseases. The scientists knew that a natural soil bacterium, Pseudomonas putida CBB5, can actually live solely on caffeine and could be used to clean up such environmental contamination.
So they set out to transfer genetic gear for metabolising, or breaking down, caffeine from P putida into that old workhorse of biotechnology, E coli, which is easy to handle and grow.
It describes development of a synthetic packet of genes for breaking down caffeine and related compounds that can be moved easily to other microbes.
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When engineered into certain E coli, the result was bacteria literally addicted to caffeine.
The genetic packet could have applications beyond environmental remediation, the scientists say, citing potential use as a sensor to measure caffeine levels in beverages, in recovery of nutrient-rich byproducts of coffee processing and for the cost-effective bioproduction of medicines.