| Literature DB >> 33982192 |
Manal Selim Mohamed Selim1, Sayeda Abdelrazek Abdelhamid2, Sahar Saleh Mohamed1.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: The ability to produce microbial bioactive compounds makes actinobacteria one of the most explored microbes among prokaryotes. The secondary metabolites of actinobacteria are known for their role in various physiological, cellular, and biological processes. MAIN BODY: Actinomycetes are widely distributed in natural ecosystem habitats such as soil, rhizosphere soil, actinmycorrhizal plants, hypersaline soil, limestone, freshwater, marine, sponges, volcanic cave-hot spot, desert, air, insects gut, earthworm castings, goat feces, and endophytic actinomycetes. The most important features of microbial bioactive compounds are that they have specific microbial producers: their diverse bioactivities and their unique chemical structures. Actinomycetes represent a source of biologically active secondary metabolites like antibiotics, biopesticide agents, plant growth hormones, antitumor compounds, antiviral agents, pharmacological compounds, pigments, enzymes, enzyme inhibitors, anti-inflammatory compounds, single-cell protein feed, and biosurfactant. SHORTEntities:
Keywords: Actinomycetes; Bioactive compound; Biodiversity; Secondary metabolites
Year: 2021 PMID: 33982192 PMCID: PMC8116480 DOI: 10.1186/s43141-021-00156-9
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Genet Eng Biotechnol ISSN: 1687-157X
Fig. 1Aerial mycelium of Streptomyces sp.
Fig. 2Different types of spore surface of Streptomyces sp. a (spiny), b (smooth), and c (warty)
Different groups of actinomycetes
| Section | Characteristics |
|---|---|
| Nocardioformactinomycetes | Aerobic, may be acid-alcohol fast; occur as rods, cocci, and branched filaments or form substrate and aerial mycelium that fragment; wall chemotype IV; contain mycolic acids. |
| Actinomycetes with multilocular sporangia | Aerobic to facultatively anaerobic; mycelium divides in all planes, no aerial hyphae, wall chemotype III. |
| Actinoplanetes | Aerobic sporoactinomycetes, nonmotile, spores may be enclosed within vesicles; no aerial mycelium; wall chemotype II; whole-organism hydrolysates contain arabinose and xylose. |
| Streptomycetesand related genera | Aerobic sporoactinomycetes; form an extensively branched substrate and aerial mycelium. |
| Thermomonospora and relatedgenera | Aerobic spordactinomycetes; form an extensively branched substrate and aerial mycelium, both of which may carry single of chains of spores; spores either motile or non-motile; wall chemotype III |
| Thermoactinomycetes | The stable filaments produce aerial growth. Single spores (endospores) are formed on both aerial and vegetative filaments. All species are thermophilic. The cell wall contains meso-DAP but no characteristic amino acids or sugars. |
| Other genera | They all produce aerial growth-bearing chains of spores |
DAP diaminopimelic acid
Fig. 3Earthworm casting
Numbers of actinomycetales species, including the all rare actinos, known to produce bioactive metabolites, are summarized [45]
| Actinomycetales species | No. | Actinomycetales species | No. |
|---|---|---|---|
| Streptomyces | 8000 | Actinomadura | 345 |
| Streptoverlicillium | 258 | Saccharothrix | 68 |
| Kitasatosporia | 37 | Microbispora | 54 |
| Chainia | 30 | Actinosynnema | 51 |
| Microellobosporia | 11 | Nocardiopsis | 41 |
| Nocardioides | 9 | Microtetraspora/Nonomuria | 26/21 |
| Thermomonospora | 19 | ||
| Micromonospora | 740 | Micropolyspora/Faenia | 13/3 |
| Actinoplanes | 248 | Thermoactinomyces | 14 |
| Dactylosporangium | 58 | Thermopolyspora | 1 |
| Ampullariella | 9 | Thermoactinopolyspora | 1 |
| Glycomyces | 2 | ||
| Catenuloplanes | 3 | Nocardia | 357 |
| Catellatospora | 1 | Mycobacterium | 57 |
| Arthrobacter | 25 | ||
| Saccharopolyspora | 131 | Brevibacterium | 17 |
| Amycalotopsis/Nocardia | 120/357 | Proactinomyces | 14 |
| Kibdellosporangium | 34 | Rhodococcus | 13 |
| Pseudonocardia | 27 | ||
| Amycolata | 12 | Actinosporangium | 30 |
| Saccharomonospora | 2 | Microellobosporia | 11 |
| Actinopolyspora | 1 | Frankia | 7 |
| Westerdykella | 6 | ||
| Streptosporangium | 79 | Kitasatoa | 5 |
| Streptoalloteichus | 48 | Synnenomyces | 4 |
| Spirillospora | 11 | Sebekia | 3 |
| Planobispora | 10 | Elaktomyces | 3 |
| Kutzneria | 4 | Excelsospora | 3 |
| Planomonospora | 2 | Waksmania | 3 |
| Alkalomyces 1 | 1 | ||
| Catellatospora 1 | 1 | ||
| Erythrosporangium | 1 | ||
| Streptoplanospora | 1 | ||
| Microechinospora | 1 | ||
| Salinospora | 1 | ||
Fig. 4Distribution of the discovered antibiotics according to their origin a (number), and b (percentage) [48]
List of some antibiotics produced by Streptomyces sp. [47]
| Antibiotic | Antibiotic | ||
|---|---|---|---|
| Cycloserin n | Erythromycin | ||
| Vancomycin | Chloramphenicol | ||
| Neomycin, actinomycin, fosfomycin, dekamycin | Chlortetracycline, dimethylchlor | ||
| Amphotricin B | Spiramycin | ||
| Nistatin | Avermicin | ||
| Rifampin | Puromycin | ||
| Streptomycin | Novobicin | ||
| Kanamycin | Platenmycin | ||
| Tobramycin | Daptomycin | ||
| Spectinomycin | Ribostamycin | ||
| Tetracycline | Cycloserine | ||
| Lincomycin, clindamycin | Viomycin | ||
| Oxytetracyclin | Cephalosporin |
List of the bioactive compounds derived from actinobacteria showed antibacterial and antitumor activities [41]
| Bioactive compound | Species | Activity |
|---|---|---|
| Abyssomicin | Antibacterial and antitumor | |
| Actinofuranones A-B | Antibacterial and antitumor | |
| Analogs-metacycloprodigiosin | Anticancer | |
| Benzanthraaquinone | Antibacterial and antitumor | |
| Butenolides | Antitumor | |
| Mechercharmycin | Antitumor | |
| Diphosphatidylglycerol | Antitumor |
Fig. 5Production of pigmented secondary metabolites by Streptomyces colonies [63]
Fig. 6A panoramic view of Streptomyces coelicolor including the blue antibiotic actinorhodin is excreted into the medium and into aqueous droplets on the hydrophobic surface of the colony [63]
Commercial enzymes produced by actinomycetes with their application [41]
| Enzyme | Actinomycetes strains | Use | Industrial of application |
|---|---|---|---|
| Protease | Detergents | Detergents | |
| Cheese making | Food | ||
| Clarication—low calorie beer | Brewing | ||
| Dehiding | Leather | ||
| Treatment of blood clot | Medicine | ||
| Cellulase | Removal of stains, denim nishing, soening of detergent | Deinking, modication of bers, paper and pulp Denim nishing, soening of cotton | |
| Lipase | Removal of stains | Detergent | |
| Stability of dough and conditioning | Baking | ||
| Cheese avoring | Dairy | ||
| Deinking, cleaning | Textile | ||
| Xylanase | Conditioning of dough | Baking | |
| Digestibility | Animal feed | ||
| Bleach boosting | Paper and pulp | ||
| Pectinase | Clarication, mashing | Beverage | |
| Amylase | Soness of bread soness | Detergent | |
| Removal of stains volume | Baking | ||
| Deinking, drainage improvement | Paper and pulp | ||
| Production of glucose and fructose syrups | Starch industry | ||
| Removal of starch from woven fabrics | Textile | ||
| Glucos oxidase | Strengthening of dough | Baking | |
| Lipoxygenase | Bread whitening | Baking | |
| Phytase | Phytate digestibility | Animal feed | |
| Peroxidase | Removal of excess dye | Textile | |
| β-galactosidase | Enzymatic hydrolysis of lactose either from milk/whey or pure lactose | Dairy | |
| Reduce the formation of acrylamide, a carcinogen found in starchy food products | Food industry | ||
| Flavor enhancing agent in food | Food industry | ||
| Keratinase | Animal feed | Poultry industry | |
| Petinase | Retting and degumming of fiber crops | Textile industry |
Fig. 7Global enzyme industry market in the years a (2011), and b (2016) [72]
Fig. 8Growth in number of patents issued for important industrial enzymes over past few decades [72]