| Literature DB >> 25984990 |
F Jerry Reen1, José A Gutiérrez-Barranquero2, Alan D W Dobson3, Claire Adams4, Fergal O'Gara5,6.
Abstract
The vast oceans of the world, which comprise a huge variety of unique ecosystems, are emerging as a rich and relatively untapped source of novel bioactive compounds with invaluable biotechnological and pharmaceutical potential. Evidence accumulated over the last decade has revealed that the diversity of marine microorganisms is enormous with many thousands of bacterial species detected that were previously unknown. Associated with this diversity is the production of diverse repertoires of bioactive compounds ranging from peptides and enzymes to more complex secondary metabolites that have significant bioactivity and thus the potential to be exploited for innovative biotechnology. Here we review the discovery and functional potential of marine bioactive peptides such as lantibiotics, nanoantibiotics and peptidomimetics, which have received particular attention in recent years in light of their broad spectrum of bioactivity. The significance of marine peptides in cell-to-cell communication and how this may be exploited in the discovery of novel bioactivity is also explored. Finally, with the recent advances in bioinformatics and synthetic biology, it is becoming clear that the integration of these disciplines with genetic and biochemical characterization of the novel marine peptides, offers the most potential in the development of the next generation of societal solutions.Entities:
Keywords: lantibiotics; marine bioactives; mimetics; motif/domain; peptides; quorum quenching; quorum sensing; signaling molecules
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2015 PMID: 25984990 PMCID: PMC4446613 DOI: 10.3390/md13052924
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Mar Drugs ISSN: 1660-3397 Impact factor: 5.118
Figure 1Biotechnology applications of marine peptides. The enormous potential for application of marine peptides has begun to be realized in recent years. Developments, both technological and societal, across a wide spectrum of industries have led to the use of peptides in previously unforeseen products. As technologies continue to develop, and pending our capacity to harvest the rich reservoirs of rare and novel bioactive peptides, the market need for these molecules is likely to continue its growth trajectory.
Marine Peptide Biotechnology.
| Marine Sector | Application |
|---|---|
| Functional Ingredients | Algae and biofuels |
| Seafood byproducts | |
| Food and Nutrition | Food safety and quality |
| Aquaculture | |
| Bioprospecting | |
| Nutrition | |
| Product stability | |
| Seafood and health | |
| Nutraceuticals | |
| New Horizons | Photography |
| Textiles | |
| Leather | |
| Electronics | |
| Cosmetics | Biofilms |
| Antioxidants | |
| Dispersants | |
| Emulsifiers | |
| Anti-ageing |
Figure 2Marine biodiscovery pipeline for subtilomycin. The identification and isolation of novel bioactive compounds from the marine ecosystem requires the integration of several technologies. The cross-disciplinary nature of these pipelines merely reflects the complexity of the natural compounds that are produced by marine bacteria and other organisms. Produced by a marine sponge isolate that was found to produce an antimicrobial compound upon initial screening, isolation and characterization of the novel lantibiotic required the combination of chemical and genomic technologies. Subsequently, purified and characterized subtilomycin was found to have activity against a broad spectrum of Gram negative and Gram positive pathogens.
Marine microbial-derived peptides against AIP and AHL dependent-QS systems.
| Bacterial Species | Isolated From | Peptide Inhibitor | Target QS System and Phenotypes | Source |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Marine Antarctic sponge | DKP, Cyclic dipeptide: Cyclo | Interferes with AHL-QS system | [ | |
| Inhibits bioluminescence by | ||||
| Inhibits | ||||
| Marine sediment | DKP, Cyclic dipeptide: Cyclo | Interferes with AHL-QS system | [ | |
| Inhibits bioluminescence by | ||||
| Inhibits | ||||
| Marine sponge | Linear dipeptides: Pro-Gly | Interferes with AHL-QS system | [ | |
| Inhibition against | ||||
| Inhibits violacein production by | ||||
| Belong to the active fraction, but its effect against QS system was not demonstrated | [ | |||
| Mussel surface | Cyclodepsipeptides: Solonamide B | Interferes with the AIP-QS system | [ | |
| Increases | ||||
| Reduces the expression of | ||||
| Interferes with the binding of | ||||
| Ngercheumicin F,G,H, and I | Interferes with the AIP-QS system | [ | ||
| Modulate the expression of QS regulated virulence genes: Increases | ||||
| Reduces the expression of |
Figure 3Marine metagenomics for bioactive peptide discovery. Overcoming the ‘great plate anomaly’ has proven difficult where marine organisms are concerned and many rare and potentially important bioactivities remain as yet out of reach. However, the advent of metagenomics based technologies has opened up new avenues for exploration and it provides us with a real opportunity to extract new potential from the marine environment. Bottlenecks remain, however, and these will need to be overcome before the full potential of marine biodiscovery can be realized. These include issues surrounding DNA extraction, sequencing depth, heterologous expression, standardization of technologies and metadata, and bioactive detection. Solving these limitations will require the integration of cross-disciplinary expertise backed by powerful data systems and industrial know how.
Key considerations for the application of metagenomics technologies.
| Metagenomic Challenges | |
|---|---|
| With the dynamic nature of population flux already reported, where the isolation of novel bioactive natural products is the ultimate goal, the source of the metagenomic DNA is a central consideration. | |
| Something that has proven a major bottleneck to complete coverage of library construction and associated screens. The diversity of organisms present, the extent to which they will yield their DNA using conventional or adapted isolation protocols, the differences in abundance between the dominant potentially uninteresting species and the rare potentially lucrative organisms, all present a major headache that needs to be overcome if we are to maximally exploit this technology. | |
| This presents an additional challenge to researchers with computational advances now urgently required to meet the explosion in available data. Automated genome mining tools and eventually pattern recognition based algorithms are required to deal with the large datasets emerging from these studies. This is crucial in overcoming the oversampling of abundant organisms with loss of information from the lower abundant species. | |
| Perhaps an obvious limitation arising from the heterogeneous nature of microbial communities and the fragment sizes that classically populate metagenomic libraries. | |
| Even if bottlenecks in sequencing and bioinformatics are overcome, heterologous expression, although possible, is fraught with limitations, including codon usage, rare tRNAs, promoter recognition, toxicity, yield and stability. | |
| Activating silent or inactive biosynthetic clusters remains a major challenge, with significant bioactive potential ‘locked in’ within the marine microbial community. | |
| The exponential increase in sequence data requires the urgent development of unified standards for the cross-community annotation and description of biosynthetic gene clusters. |