| Literature DB >> 27708627 |
Marta Maciejewska1, Delphine Adam1, Loïc Martinet1, Aymeric Naômé1, Magdalena Całusińska2, Philippe Delfosse2, Monique Carnol3, Hazel A Barton4, Marie-Pierre Hayette5, Nicolas Smargiasso6, Edwin De Pauw6, Marc Hanikenne7, Denis Baurain8, Sébastien Rigali1.
Abstract
Moonmilk speleothems of limestone caves host a rich microbiome, among which Actinobacteria represent one of the most abundant phyla. Ancient medical texts reported that moonmilk had therapeutical properties, thereby suggesting that its filamentous endemic actinobacterial population might be a source of natural products useful in human treatment. In this work, a screening approach was undertaken in order to isolate cultivable Actinobacteria from moonmilk of the Grotte des Collemboles in Belgium, to evaluate their taxonomic profile, and to assess their potential in biosynthesis of antimicrobials. Phylogenetic analysis revealed that all 78 isolates were exclusively affiliated to the genus Streptomyces and clustered into 31 distinct phylotypes displaying various pigmentation patterns and morphological features. Phylotype representatives were tested for antibacterial and antifungal activities and their genomes were mined for secondary metabolite biosynthetic genes coding for non-ribosomal peptide synthetases (NRPSs), and polyketide synthases (PKS). The moonmilk Streptomyces collection was found to display strong inhibitory activities against a wide range of reference organisms, as 94, 71, and 94% of the isolates inhibited or impaired the growth of Gram-positive, Gram-negative bacteria, and fungi, respectively. Interestingly, 90% of the cave strains induced strong growth suppression against the multi-drug resistant Rasamsonia argillacea, a causative agent of invasive mycosis in cystic fibrosis and chronic granulomatous diseases. No correlation was observed between the global antimicrobial activity of an individual strain and the number of NRPS and PKS genes predicted in its genome, suggesting that approaches for awakening cryptic metabolites biosynthesis should be applied to isolates with no antimicrobial phenotype. Overall, our work supports the common belief that moonmilk might effectively treat various infectious diseases thanks to the presence of a highly diverse population of prolific antimicrobial producing Streptomyces, and thus may indeed constitute a promising reservoir of potentially novel active natural compounds.Entities:
Keywords: MLSA phylogeny; cryptic antibiotics; genome mining; geomicrobiology; secondary metabolism
Year: 2016 PMID: 27708627 PMCID: PMC5030222 DOI: 10.3389/fmicb.2016.01455
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Microbiol ISSN: 1664-302X Impact factor: 5.640
The closest relatives, phylogenetic affiliations, phylotype clustering, and isolation origin of the 31 representative moonmilk isolates.
| Isolate | Closest relatives | 16S rRNA identity % (gaps) | Accession number | Origin of the closest relatives | COL | Md | Phylotype 16S → MLSA |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| MM1 | 99.1 (4)/99.1 (6) | KU714864 | Plant (rubber)/unknown | COL3 | SN | I | |
| MM3 | Un. bacterium clone Md-54/Un. bacterium clone 10–355 | 99.8 (0)/99.8 (0) | KU714892 | Soil/soil | COL3 | SN | II |
| MM5 | 99.7 (0)/99.4 (2) | KU714904 | Both plant (potato) | COL3 | SN | III | |
| MM6 | 99.7 (0)/99.8 (0) | KU714910 | Glacier soil (Alaska)/soil | COL3 | SN | IV | |
| MM7 | 99.6 (0)/99.9 (0) | KU714915 | Soil/soil | COL3 | SN | V = V | |
| MM10 | 99.1 (4)/98.6 (7) | KU714865 | Soil/soil | COL3 | SN | VI = VI | |
| MM12 | 99.8 (0)/99.6 (0) | KU714878 | Soil/plant (potato) | COL3 | SN | VII = VII | |
| MM13 | 98.8 (4)/98.7 (4) | KU714882 | Both plant (potato) | COL3 | SN | VIII = VIII | |
| MM14 | 100 (0)/100 (0) | KU714883 | Both unknown | COL3 | SN | IX = IX | |
| MM17 | 99.7 (0)/99.8 (0) | KU714885 | Glacier soil (Alaska)/soil | COL3 | SN | IV → XXVI | |
| MM19 | 99.6 (0)/99.9 (0) | KU714887 | Soil/soil | COL3 | SN | V → XXVII | |
| MM21 | Un. bacterium clone Md-54/Un. bacterium clone 10–355 | 99.7 (0)/99.7 (0) | KU714888 | Soil/soil | COL3 | SN | XI = XI |
| MM23 | Un. bacterium clone Md-54/Un. bacterium clone 10–355 | 99.8 (0)/99.8 (0) | KU714890 | Soil/soil | COL3 | SN | II → XXVIII |
| MM24 | 98.3 (5)/98.4 (4) | KU714891 | Plant (potato)/animals (ants) | COL3 | SN | XII = XII | |
| MM44 | Un. bacterium clone Md-54/Un. bacterium clone 10–355 | 99.7 (0)/99.7 (0) | KU714900 | Soil/soil | COL3 | SN | XI → XXIX |
| MM48 | 99.9 (1)/99.6 (0) | KU714903 | Unknown/glacier soil (Alaska) | COL3 | MMch | XIII = XIII | |
| MM59 | 99.5 (1)/99.4 (1) | KU714909 | Both plant (potato) | COL3 | MMch | III → XXX | |
| MM68 | 99.0 (2)/99.0 (2) | KU714913 | Both plant (potato) | COL3 | B-4 | XIV = XIV | |
| MM90 | 99.5 (4)/99.4 (5) | KU714925 | Soil/soil | COL1 | ISP4 | XV → – | |
| MM99 | 99.7 (2)/99.7 (2) | KU714928 | Unknown/plant (potato) | COL1 | ISP6 | XVI = XVI | |
| MM100 | 99.9 (0)/99.5 (0) | KU714866 | Soil/plant (potato) | COL1 | B-4 | XVII = XVII | |
| MM104 | 99.2 (0)/99.0 (0) | KU714869 | Deep sea/plant (potato) | COL3 | ISP6 | XVIII = XVIII | |
| MM105 | 99.4 (6)/99.3 (5) | KU714870 | Soil/animals (earthworm) | COL3 | ISP6 | XIX = XIX | |
| MM106 | 99.0 (0)/98.8 (1) | KU714871 | Soil/unknown | COL3 | ISP1 | XX = XX | |
| MM107 | 98.8 (2)/98.8 (0) | KU714872 | Soil/soil | COL3 | ISP1 | XXI = XXI | |
| MM108 | 100 (0)/99.3 (2) | KU714873 | Soil/animals (ants) | COL3 | ISP7 | XXII = XXII | |
| MM109 | 100 (0)/99.9 (0) | KM207217.2 | Cave/cave | COL3 | ISP7 | X = X | |
| MM111 | 99.7 (0)/99.5 (2) | KU714875 | Animals (ants)/soil | COL4 | ISP6 | XXIII = XXIII | |
| MM117 | 99.7 (0)/99.7 (0) | KU714876 | Antarctic lichen/soil | COL4 | ISP7 | XXIV = XXIV | |
| MM122 | 100 (0)/100 (0) | KU714879 | Antarctic lichen/soil | COL4 | B-4 | IX → XXXI | |
| MM128 | 99.9 (0)/99.0 (4) | KU714881 | Glacier soil (Arctic)/soil | COL4 | SN | XXV = XXV | |