| Literature DB >> 35677864 |
Suranat Phonghanpot1, Faongchat Jarintanan2.
Abstract
Thailand was proposed to be rich unexplored source of microorganisms, especially bacterial strains. There should be bacteria with high secondary metabolite production potential in the natural resources that are still unidentified. Moreover, they might not produce secondary metabolites in standard laboratory culture condition after isolation, in which coculture condition would help us pursuing the bacteria to produce bioactive metabolites. Here, we aimed to identify new bacterial strains with high secondary metabolite production potential from Thailand's natural resources. To achieve the goal, we performed bacteria isolation, phylogenetic analysis, degenerate PCR of secondary metabolism genes, cocultivation, antibacterial analysis, and HPLC chemical profiling. We isolated distinct 40 bacterial strains, which have over 98% 16S rRNA sequence similarity with known species. There were 22, 31, and 29 strains giving positive PCR amplification of NRPS, PKS, and TPS genes, respectively. Among them, Bacillus licheniformis RSUCC0101 had the highest number of PCR products, 26. In standard single culture condition, crude extracts prepared from Bacillus safensis RSUCC0021 and Bacillus amyloliquefaciens RSUCC0282 could inhibit the growth of Staphylococcus aureus ATCC25923. Furthermore, the cocultivation and HPLC analyses showed that the extracts prepared from 3 pairs of culture between Staphylococcus sp. RSUCC0020, Micrococcus luteus RSUCC0053, Staphylococcus sp. RSUCC0087, and Staphylococcus pasteuri RSUCC0090 could inhibit the growth of Staphylococcus aureus ATCC25923 and produced distinct chemical profiles from their single culture condition. Our study led to the isolation and identification of several promising bacterial strains for production of secondary metabolites that might be useful in biomedical applications.Entities:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35677864 PMCID: PMC9168185 DOI: 10.1155/2022/2827831
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Scientifica (Cairo) ISSN: 2090-908X
Figure 1Phylogenetic tree constructed from 16S rRNA gene fragments of 40 isolated bacterial strains together with known close evolutionary relationship bacterial species.
Forty bacterial strains isolated and identified from Thailand's natural resources in the current study.
| Bacteria genus and species | RSUCC | Gram | Source | 16S rRNA GenBank accession number |
|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| 0003 | − | Rayong's seawater | OK056286 |
|
| 0005 | + | Rayong's seawater | OK056287 |
|
| 0008 | + | Rayong's seawater | OK056288 |
|
| 0009 | − | Rayong's seawater | OK056289 |
|
| 0010 | − | Rayong's seawater | OK056290 |
|
| 0012 | + | Rayong's seawater | OK056291 |
|
| 0013 | + | Rayong's seawater | OK056292 |
|
| 0016 | + | Rayong's seawater | OK056293 |
|
| 0018 | − | Rayong's seawater | OK056294 |
|
| 0020 | + | Rayong's seawater | OK056295 |
|
| 0021 | + | Rayong's seawater | OK056296 |
|
| 0027 | + | Rayong's seawater | OK056297 |
|
| 0029 | + | Rayong's seawater | OK056298 |
|
| 0030 | + | Rayong's seawater | OK056299 |
|
| 0037 | − | Rayong's seawater | OK056300 |
|
| 0053 | + | Rayong's seawater | OK056301 |
|
| 0056 | + | Rayong's seawater | OK056302 |
|
| 0058 | − | Rayong's seawater | OK056303 |
|
| 0064 | + | Rayong's seawater | OK056304 |
|
| 0069 | − | Rayong's seawater | OK056305 |
|
| 0071 | + | Bangkhuntien's soil | OK056306 |
|
| 0073 | − | Bangkhuntien's soil | OK056307 |
|
| 0075 | + | Bangkhuntien's soil | OK056308 |
|
| 0077 | − | Bangkhuntien's soil | OK056309 |
|
| 0078 | + | Bangkhuntien's soil | OK056310 |
|
| 0083 | + | Bangkhuntien's soil | OK056311 |
|
| 0087 | + | Bangkhuntien's soil | OK056312 |
|
| 0088 | − | Bangkhuntien's soil | OK056313 |
|
| 0090 | + | Bangkhuntien's soil | OK056314 |
|
| 0091 | + | Bangkhuntien's soil | OK056315 |
|
| 0093 | − | Bangkhuntien's soil | OK056316 |
|
| 0094 | + | Bangkhuntien's soil | OK056317 |
|
| 0096 | + | Bangkhuntien's soil | OK056318 |
|
| 0098 | + | Bangkhuntien's soil | OK056319 |
|
| 0100 | − | Bangkhuntien's soil | OK056320 |
|
| 0101 | + | Bangkhuntien's soil | OK056321 |
|
| 0133 | + | Yaowarat's herbs | OK056322 |
|
| 0142 | + | Yaowarat's herbs | OK056323 |
|
| 0161 | + | Yaowarat's herbs | OK056324 |
|
| 0282 | + | Nam Nao Park's soil | OK056325 |
Number of secondary metabolism gene fragments amplified from degenerate PCR of the 40 isolated bacterial strains overlaid with their cladogram.
|
|
IZD values of the crude extracts prepared from 6 bacterial strains that could inhibit the growth of Staphylococcus aureus ATCC25923 in single culture or coculture experiments.
| Bacterial strains and IZD values |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| ND | |||||
|
| ND | 8.0 ± 1.30 | ||||
|
| 9.3 ± 0.57 | ND | ND | |||
|
| ND | ND | ND | ND | ||
|
| ND | ND | 7.7 ± 0.57 | 9.7 ± 0.57 | ND | |
|
| ND | ND | ND | ND | ND | 19.0 ± 1.50 |
ND: not determined or regarded as zero. Average IZD of rifampicin (positive control) is 29.4 ± 1.17.
Figure 2HPLC analyses of the bioactive coculture extracts together with their corresponding single culture extracts; A = 20-53, B = 20, C = 53, D = 53-90, E = 53, F = 90, G = 87-90, H = 87, I = 90; extra metabolite signals detected by the detector are indicated by arrows.