| Literature DB >> 29967730 |
Mohd Adnan1, Eyad Alshammari2, Mitesh Patel3, Syed Amir Ashraf2, Saif Khan1, Sibte Hadi4.
Abstract
Natural products from the unique environments of sea water and oceans represent a largely unfamiliar source for isolation of new microbes, which are potent producers of secondary bioactive metabolites. These unique life-forms from the marine ecosphere have served as an important source of drugs since ancient times and still offer a valuable resource for novel findings by providing remedial treatments. Therefore, it can be expected that many naturally bioactive marine microbial compounds with novel structures and bioactivities against those from terrestrial environments may be found among marine metabolites. Biofilms in aquatic environment possess serious problems to naval forces and oceanic industries around the globe. Current anti-biofilm or anti-biofouling technology is based on the use of toxic substances that can be harmful to their surrounding natural locales. Comprehensive research has been done to examine the bioactive potential of marine microbes. Results are remarkably varied and dynamic, but there is an urgent need for bioactive compounds with environmentally friendly or "green" chemical activities. Marine microbes have the potential as upcoming and promising source of non-toxic compounds with sustainable anti-biofouling/anti-biofilm properties as they can produce substances that can inhibit not only the chemical components required for biofilm production but also the attachment, microorganism growth, and/or cell-cell communication.Entities:
Keywords: Bioactive compounds; Biofilm; Biofouling; Green chemistry; Marine microbes
Year: 2018 PMID: 29967730 PMCID: PMC6026461 DOI: 10.7717/peerj.5049
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PeerJ ISSN: 2167-8359 Impact factor: 2.984
Figure 1Comparative statistical data about number of publications in PubMed since 1989 till 2017.
Comparative general data about the number of publications in PubMed when searching for several keywords/phrases: (1) microbial natural bioactive compounds (blue column); (2) marine microbial natural bioactive compounds (yellow column); (3) microbial anti-biofilm compounds (red column); and (4) marine microbial anti-biofilm compounds (green column). Moving average trend lines show the importance and urgent need for research concerning on marine microbial natural anti-biofouling/anti-biofilm compounds.
List of areas commonly known for applications/uses of marine microbial natural bioactive compounds.
| Antibacterial | |
| Antiviral | |
| Antiparasitic | |
| Antifungal | |
| Anticoagulant | |
| Antimutagenic | |
| Antihyperglycaemic | |
| Antitumoral | |
| Antiinflammatory | |
| Anticarcinogenic | |
| Antioxidant | |
| Taste astringent | |
| Photoprotection | |
| Immunomodulator | |
| Emulsifier | |
| Gelling agent | |
| Cosmetics industry | |
| Textile industry | |
| Stimulant |
List of few marine microbial species reported to produce bioactive metabolites with antibiofilm and antifouling activities (Abu Sayem et al., 2011; Arai, Niikawa & Kobayashi, 2013; Busetti et al., 2015; Dos Santos et al., 2010; Estrela & Abraham, 2016; Fusetani, 2011; Hong & Cho, 2013; Jiang et al., 2011; Salta et al., 2013; Satheesh, Ba-Akdah & Al-Sofyani, 2016; Scopel et al., 2014; Shao et al., 2015; Shao et al., 2011; Yang et al., 2007).
| Microorganism | Bioactive compound | Biological activity | Effects against | Relevance |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| α-D-galactopyranosyl-(1→2)-glycerol-phosphate | Antibiofilm | Clinical | ||
| Ubiquinone-8 | Antifouling | Larval settlement of barnacle | Environmental | |
| 6-bromoindole-3-carboxaldehyde | Antifouling | Larval settlement of barnacle | Environmental | |
| Pyolipic acid | Antifouling | Larval settlement under laboratory and field experiment assays | Environmental | |
| Phenazine-1-carboxylic acid | Antifouling | Larval settlement under laboratory and field experiment assays | Environmental | |
| 2-alkylquinol-4-ones | Antifouling | Larval settlement under laboratory and field experiment assays | Environmental | |
| Diketopiperazines | Antifouling | Larval settlement under laboratory and field experiment assays | Environmental | |
| 3-octa-1′,3′-dienyl-4-methylfuran-2(5 | Antifouling | Zoospores of | Environmental | |
| 3-octa-1′-enyl-4-methylfuran-2(5 | Antifouling | Zoospores of | Environmental | |
| Exopolysaccharide A101 | Antibiofilm | Clinical | ||
| 3-methyl-N-(2-phenylethyl) butanamide | Antifouling | Larval settlement of barnacle | Industrial/Environmental | |
| Dihydroquinolin-2(1 | Antifouling | Larval settlement of barnacle | Industrial/Environmental | |
| Cyclo (D-Pro-D-Phe) | Antifouling | Larval settlement of barnacle | ||
| Resorcyclic acid lactones | Antifouling | Larval settlement of barnacle | Industrial/Environmental | |
| Ophiobolin K | Antibiofilm | Clinical | ||
| 6-epi-ophiobolin K | Antibiofilm | Clinical | ||
| 6-epi-ophiobolin | Antibiofilm | Clinical | ||
| Unidentified marine fungus | Mevalonolactone | Antibiofilm | Clinical | |
| Marine | Cyclo(L-Tyr-L-Leu) | Antibiofilm | Clinical/Environmental | |
| Cyclo(L-Leu-L-Pro) | Antibiofilm | Clinical/Environmental | ||
| F14 cyclo-(Phe-Pro) | Antibiofilm | Clinical/Environmental | ||
| cyclo-(Val-Pro) 4 | Antibiofilm | Clinical/Environmental | ||
| Flavipesin A 49 | Antibiofilm | Clinical | ||
| (+)—Usnic acid | Antibiofilm | Environmental | ||
| Juglone | Antibiofilm | Environmental | ||
| Elatol | Antifouling | Clinical | ||
| Organic extract | Antibiofilm | Clinical | ||