| Literature DB >> 31598176 |
Benjamin Libor1, Henrik Harms1, Stefan Kehraus1, Ekaterina Egereva1, Max Crüsemann1, Gabriele M König1.
Abstract
Fungi are an important source of bioactive metabolites. The Fungal one-step IsolatioN Device (FIND) technology allows the isolation of rare fungi from terrestrial and marine samples. The FIND comprises a multi-chambered micro agar plate, where initially only one fungal part (e.g., hyphal cell, mycelial fragment or spore) is located in each chamber. After inoculation the device is placed back into the original natural environment of sample collection, to ensure favourable growth conditions. Experiments were carried out with terrestrial soil and marine sediment, as well as sea water samples to validate this method. This yielded axenic cultures of 12 different filamentous fungi, one of them being the marine-adapted fungal strain Heydenia cf. alpina. The latter produced two new terpenoids, which are the first secondary metabolites from this genus.Entities:
Keywords: FIND; Heydenia cf. alpina; fungal one-step isolation device; natural products; terpenes
Year: 2019 PMID: 31598176 PMCID: PMC6774082 DOI: 10.3762/bjoc.15.216
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Beilstein J Org Chem ISSN: 1860-5397 Impact factor: 2.883
Scheme 1Design and functional parts of the FIND technology.
Scheme 2Isolation of fungal strains with the FIND technology. 1. Collection of terrestrial or marine sample. 2. Sample preparations. 3. Determination of the number of microbial cells. 4/5. Dilution or concentration of sample and merging with molten agar. 6. Adjustment of the concentration of fungal parts in such a way that in average one fungal part is finally placed in one growing chamber. 7. Attachment of semipermeable membranes to the central plate and sealing with upper and lower plates. 8. Placement of the loaded and assembled device into the original environment for incubation.
Fungal taxa obtained by four FIND experiments and identified by sequence comparison with the best BLASTn match within the NCBI GenBank database.
| Species/genus [GenBank accession number] | ID% | Number of bp analysed | Taxonomic class |
| 99a | 506 | Sordariomycetes | |
| 100b | 531 | Sordariomycetes | |
| 100c; 100d | 511; 241 | Dothideomycetes | |
| 100a | 549 | incertae sedis | |
| 100d | 236 | Dothideomycetes | |
| 99b | 509 | Eurotiomycetes | |
| 99b; 99e | 552; 999 | Leotiomycetes | |
| 100f; 100g | 380; 585 | Sordariomycetes | |
| 99h | 538 | Eurotiomycetes | |
| 100i | 200 | Sordariomycetes | |
| 100b | 624 | Sordariomycetes | |
| 100b | 609 | Sordariomycetes | |
1Eskesberg, Wuppertal (DE), soil sample, 2Aegean Sea (GR), marine sediment, 3Kappeln (DE), brackish water sediment, 4Katwijk aan Zee (NL), sea water
a18S rRNA gene, ITS1, 5.8S rRNA gene, ITS2, b18S rRNA gene, ITS1, 5.8S rRNA gene, ITS2, 28S rRNA gene, cITS1, 5.8S rRNA gene, ITS2, dtef1α, e28S rRNA, fβ-tubulin, gRPBII, hITS1, 5.8S rRNA gene, ITS2 and 28S rRNA gene, iITS2
Figure 1Secondary metabolites isolated from H. cf. alpina.
Figure 2a) Significant 1H,1H-COSY and 1H,13C-HMBC correlations for compounds 1 and 2. b) Key NOESY correlations for compounds 1 and 2.