Literature DB >> 20437069

Culturability and secondary metabolite diversity of extreme microbes: expanding contribution of deep sea and deep-sea vent microbes to natural product discovery.

Robin K Pettit1.   

Abstract

Microbes from extreme environments do not necessarily require extreme culture conditions. Perhaps the most extreme environments known, deep-sea hydrothermal vent sites, support an incredible array of archaea, bacteria, and fungi, many of which have now been cultured. Microbes cultured from extreme environments have not disappointed in the natural products arena; diverse bioactive secondary metabolites have been isolated from cultured extreme-tolerant microbes, extremophiles, and deep-sea microbes. The contribution of vent microbes to our arsenal of natural products will likely grow, given the culturability of vent microbes; their metabolic, physiologic, and phylogenetic diversity; numerous reports of bioactive natural products from microbes inhabiting high acid, high temperature, or high pressure environments; and the recent isolation of new chroman derivatives and siderophores from deep-sea hydrothermal vent bacteria.

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Year:  2010        PMID: 20437069     DOI: 10.1007/s10126-010-9294-y

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Mar Biotechnol (NY)        ISSN: 1436-2228            Impact factor:   3.619


  65 in total

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6.  Antimicrobial ergosteroids and pyrrole derivatives from halotolerant Aspergillus flocculosus PT05-1 cultured in a hypersaline medium.

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10.  Phylogenetic identification of marine bacteria isolated from deep-sea sediments of the eastern South Atlantic Ocean.

Authors:  Marcus Adonai Castro da Silva; Angélica Cavalett; Ananda Spinner; Daniele Cristina Rosa; Regina Beltrame Jasper; Maria Carolina Quecine; Maria Letícia Bonatelli; Aline Pizzirani-Kleiner; Gertrudes Corção; André Oliveira de Souza Lima
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