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Marine Sediments Hold an Untapped Potential for Novel Taxonomic and Bioactive Bacterial Diversity

Marine Sediments Hold an Untapped Potential for Novel Taxonomic and Bioactive Bacterial Diversity

https://devfeature-collection.sl.nsw.gov.au/record/TN_cdi_doaj_primary_oai_doaj_org_article_edd65d39c7f040a6acd79355db8b2981

Marine Sediments Hold an Untapped Potential for Novel Taxonomic and Bioactive Bacterial Diversity

About this item

Full title

Marine Sediments Hold an Untapped Potential for Novel Taxonomic and Bioactive Bacterial Diversity

Publisher

Washington: American Society for Microbiology

Journal title

mSystems, 2020-10, Vol.5 (5)

Language

English

Formats

Publication information

Publisher

Washington: American Society for Microbiology

More information

Scope and Contents

Contents

Since bacterial resistance to antibiotics is developing worldwide, new antibiotics are needed. Most antibiotics discovered so far have been found in soil-dwelling bacteria, so we instead targeted marine environments as a novel source of bioactive potential. We used amplicon sequencing of bioactive gene clusters in the microbiome of coastal seawater and sandy sediments and found the bioactive potential to be comparable to, but distinct from, the bioactive potential of selected soil microbiomes. Moreover, most of this potential is not captured by culturing. Comparing the biosynthetic potential to the corresponding microbiome composition suggested that minor constituents of the microbiome likely hold a disproportionally large fraction of the biosynthesis potential.
Novel natural products have traditionally been sourced from culturable soil microorganisms, whereas marine sources have been less explored. The purpose of this study was to profile the microbial biosynthetic potential in coastal surface seawater and sandy sediment samples and to evaluate the feasibility of capturing this potential using traditional culturing methods. Amplicon sequencing of conserved ketosynthase (KS) and adenylation (AD) domains within polyketide synthase (PKS) and nonribosomal peptide synthetase (NRPS) genes showed that seawater and, in particular, sandy sediment had a high biosynthetic potential with 6,065 and 11,072 KS operational biosynthetic units (OBUs) and 3,292 and 5,691 AD OBUs, respectively, compared to that of four soil samples collected by Charlop-Powers et al. (Z. Charlop-Powers, C. C. Pregitzer, C. Lemetre, M. A. Ternei, et al., Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A 113:14811–14816, 2016,
https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.1615581113
) with 7,067 KS and 1,629 AD OBUs. All three niches harbored unique OBUs (
P
= 0.001 for KS and
P
= 0.002 for AD by permutational multivariate analysis of variance [PERMANOVA]). The total colonial growth captured 1.9% of KS and 13.6% of AD OBUs from seawater and 2.2% KS and 12.5% AD OBUs from sediment. In a subset of bioactive i...

Alternative Titles

Full title

Marine Sediments Hold an Untapped Potential for Novel Taxonomic and Bioactive Bacterial Diversity

Identifiers

Primary Identifiers

Record Identifier

TN_cdi_doaj_primary_oai_doaj_org_article_edd65d39c7f040a6acd79355db8b2981

Permalink

https://devfeature-collection.sl.nsw.gov.au/record/TN_cdi_doaj_primary_oai_doaj_org_article_edd65d39c7f040a6acd79355db8b2981

Other Identifiers

ISSN

2379-5077

E-ISSN

2379-5077

DOI

10.1128/mSystems.00782-20

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