| Literature DB >> 34067750 |
Stefano Varrella1, Giulio Barone2, Michael Tangherlini3, Eugenio Rastelli4, Antonio Dell'Anno5, Cinzia Corinaldesi1.
Abstract
The Antarctic Ocean is one of the most remote and inaccessible environments on our planet and hosts potentially high biodiversity, being largely unexplored and undescribed. Fungi have key functions and unique physiological and morphological adaptations even in extreme conditions, from shallow habitats to deep-sea sediments. Here, we summarized information on diversity, the ecological role, and biotechnological potential of marine fungi in the coldest biome on Earth. This review also discloses the importance of boosting research on Antarctic fungi as hidden treasures of biodiversity and bioactive molecules to better understand their role in marine ecosystem functioning and their applications in different biotechnological fields.Entities:
Keywords: Antarctica; bioprospecting; blue biotechnologies; cold-adapted enzymes; fungal diversity; industrial applications; marine fungi; mycology; psychrophiles
Year: 2021 PMID: 34067750 PMCID: PMC8157204 DOI: 10.3390/jof7050391
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Fungi (Basel) ISSN: 2309-608X
Figure 1Locations of the fungi identified from different Antarctic marine substrates: animals (orange circle), sediments (yellow circle), macroalgae (green circle), and water (blue circle) based on culture dependent approaches or identified through metagenomic analysis: animals (purple cross) and sediments (pink cross) (for detailed elucidation on the samples where fungal taxa were isolated, and coordinates see Table S1).
Figure 2Network diagram displaying the records of Antarctic fungal taxa belonging to different genera identified through culture dependent approaches or metagenomic analyses in the four most commonly marine matrices (water, sediments, animals, macroalgae). The size of the white nodes is proportional to the number of records in the studies in which the genus has been found, while the size of coloured nodes is proportional to the overall number of genera retrieved.
Bioactive molecules isolated from Antarctic marine fungi. Available chemical structures of the bioactive compounds have been downloaded from [164] and used to produce Figures S1–S3 for ease of visualization.
| Fungal Taxa | Product | Bioactivity | Source | Ref. |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2,4-Dihydroxy-3,5,6-trimethylbenzoic acid; Citreorosein; Pinselin; Citrinin; Dihydrocitrinone; Pennicitrinone A; Quinolactacin A1 | Cytotoxic activities against MCF-7, A549, K562 cell lines | Antarctic krill | [ | |
| Diketopiperazine, phenols | Inhibitory activity against HCT116 cancer cell line | Marine sediment, Great Wall Station | [ | |
| Diketopiperazine | Cytotoxic activities against K562 cell line | Marine sediment, Pridz Bay | [ | |
| Penilactone A | NF-KB inhibitory activities of HCT-8, Bel-7402, BGC-823, A549 and A2780 tumor cell lines | Deep-sea sediment, Prydz Bay | [ | |
| Citromycetin derivative, neuchromenin; myxotrichin C, deoxyfunicone; | Anti-inflammatory; tyrosine phosphatase 1B inhibition | Marine sediment, Ross Sea | [ | |
| Spirograterpene A | Antiallergic effect on immunoglobulin E (IgE)-mediated rat mast RBL-2H3 cells | Deep-sea sediment, Prydz Bay | [ | |
| Chlorinated eremophilane sesquiterpenes, eremofortine C, eremophilane-type sesquiterpenes, eremophilane-type lactam | Cytotoxic activity against HL-60 and A549 cancer cell lines | Deep-sea sediment, Prydz Bay | [ | |
| Butanolide A, guignarderemophilane F, xylarenone A | Butanolide: inhibitory activity against tyrosine phosphatase 1B; xylarenone A: antitumor activity against HeLa and HepG2 cells and growth-inhibitory effects against pathogenic microbes | Sea-bed sediment | [ | |
| Aromatic compounds | Antifungal and trypanocidal activities | Macroalgae: | [ | |
| Pseudogymnoascin A, B, C, 3-nitroasterric acid; Geomycins B, C | Antibacterial and antifungal activities | Sponge genus | [ | |
|
| Asperelines A-F, peptaibols | Not assayed | Marine sediment, Penguin Island | [ |
Examples of extremophilic fungi as a source of cold-adapted enzymes utilized in industrial applications. The fungal taxa reported are isolated from Antarctic marine environments: seawater, marine sediments, and organisms.
| Enzyme | Reaction | Fungi | Source of (Isolate) Sample | Applications/Potential Uses | Ref. |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Carragenase (EC 3.2.1.83) | Hydrolysis of 1,4-β-linkages between galactose 4-sulfate and 3,6-anhydro-galactose to produce kappa-carrageenans | Macroalga: | Biomedical field, textile industry, bioethanol production, and detergent additive | [ | |
| Cellulase | Cellulose hydrolysis into glucose | Marine sponge: | Food industry, animal feed, beer and wine, textile and laundry, pulp and paper industry, agriculture, biofuel, pharmaceutical industries, and waste management | [ | |
| Chitinase | Cleavage of glycosidic linkages in chitin and chitodextrins generating chitooligosaccharides | Shrimp wastes; seawater | Cosmetic, pharmaceutic fields, fermentation research, and biomedicine | [ | |
| Endo-β-1,3(4)-glucanase | Endohydrolysis of (1→3)- or (1→4)-linkages in β-D-glucans | Seawater | Brewing and animal, feed-stuff industry, biofuel production, and pharmaceuticals | [ | |
| Esterase | Hydrolyis of short acyl-chain soluble esters | Marine sediments; seawater, sea ice | Paper bleaching, bioremediation, degradation, and removal of xenobiotics and toxic compounds | [ | |
| Invertase | Hydrolysis of the terminal non-reducing β-fructofuranoside residue in sucrose, raffinose and related β-D-fructofuranosides | Seawater | Beverage, confectionary, bakery, invert sugar, high fructose syrup, artificial honey, calf feed, food for honeybees | [ | |
| Laccase | Oxidation of phenolic compound like lignin | Marine sediments | Biosensors, microfuel and bioelectrocatalysis, food, pharmaceutic, cosmetic, pulp and paper, textile industries, and bioremediation | [ | |
| Lignin peroxidase | Oxidative breakdown of lignin | Marine sediments | Pulp and paper, cosmetics (treatment of hyperpigmentation, and skin-lightening through melanin oxidation), textile, bioremediation (degradation of azo, heterocyclic, reactive, and polymeric dyes, xenobiotic, and pesticides), and bioethanol production | [ | |
| Lipase | Hydrolysis of long-chain triacylglycerol substances with the formation of an alcohol and a carboxylic acid | Marine sediments; Algal mat in sediment; marine sponges: | Food, beverage, detergent, biofuel production, animal feed, textiles, leather, paper processing, and cosmetic industry | [ | |
| L-asparaginase (EC 3.5.1.1) | Degradation of asparagine into ammonia and aspartate | Marine sediments | Food industry and medical applications as anti-cancer, antimicrobial, infectious diseases, autoimmune diseases | [ | |
| Pectinase | Hydrolisis of polysaccharides to produce pectate and other galacturonans | Marine sponges; marine sediments; Seawater | Food and textile industry, coffee and tea fermentation, wine processing, oil extraction, vegetable and fruit processing industry for juice clarification, color, and yield enhancer. Applications in paper and pulp making, recycling of wastepaper, pretreatment of pectic wastewaters, and retting of plant fibers | [ | |
| Phytase | Hydrolysis of phytate to produce phosphorylated myo-inositol derivatives | Deep-sea sediments | Food and feed industry, pharmaceutical use as neuro protective agents, anti-inflammatory, antioxidant and anti-cancer agents | [ | |
| Protease | Cleavage of peptide bonds | Marine macroalgae; marine sediments; marine sponges: | Food, feed, pharmacology (anticancer and antihemolytic activity) cosmetic (keratin-based preparation) industries, cleaning processes (e. g. detergent additive), waste management | [ | |
| Protease (Subtilase) | Cleavage of peptide bonds | Sub-glacial waters (depth of 200 m) | Food and beverage industries | [ | |
| Transglutami-nase | Acyl transfer reaction between gamma-carboxyamide groups of glutamine residues in proteins and various primary amines |
| Marine macroalga | Food, pharmaceutical, leather, textile, biotechnology industry, biomedical research | [ |
| Xylanase | Hydrolysis of the main chain of xylan to oligosaccharides, which in turn are degraded to xylose | Marine sponge; marine sediments | Food (bread making), feed, paper and pulp industries, and also used to increase the sugar recovery from agricultural residues for biofuel production | [ | |
| α-amylase | Cleavage of α-1,4-glycosidic linkages within starch molecules, which generate smaller polymers of glucose units | Seawater; marine sponges: | Pharmaceutical and chemical industry; employed as additives in processed food, in detergents for cold washing, in waste-water treatment, in bioremediation in cold climates, and in molecular biology protocols | [ | |
| β-agarase | Hydrolysis of beta-(1–>4) linkages of agarose to produce oligosaccharides | Macroalgae: | Food, cosmetic, medical industries, and as a tool enzyme for biological, physiological, and cytological studies | [ | |
| β-galactosidase (EC 3.2.1.23) | Hydrolysis of lactose into its constituent monosaccharides | Marine sediments | Food, biofuel, and agricultural industries; surfactant production | [ |