The use of genome sequences has become routine in guiding the discovery and identification of microbial natural products and their biosynthetic pathways. In silico prediction of molecular features, such as metabolic building blocks, physico-chemical properties or biological functions, from orphan gene clusters has opened up the characterization of many new chemo- and genotypes in genome mining approaches. Here, we guided our genome mining of two predicted enediyne pathways in Salinispora tropica CNB-440 by a DNA interference bioassay to isolate DNA-targeting enediyne polyketides. An organic extract of S. tropica showed DNA-interference activity that surprisingly was not abolished in genetic mutants of the targeted enediyne pathways, ST_pks1 and spo. Instead we showed that the product of the orphan type II polyketide synthase pathway, ST_pks2, is solely responsible for the DNA-interfering activity of the parent strain. Subsequent comparative metabolic profiling revealed the lomaiviticins, glycosylated diazofluorene polyketides, as the ST_pks2 products. This study marks the first report of the 59 open reading frame lomaiviticin gene cluster (lom) and supports the biochemical logic of their dimeric construction via a pathway related to the kinamycin monomer.
Summary
Members of the marine actinomycete genus Salinispora
constitutively produce a characteristic orange pigment during vegetative growth.
Contrary to the understanding of widespread carotenoid biosynthesis pathways in
bacteria, Salinispora carotenoid biosynthesis genes are not
confined to a single cluster. Instead, bioinformatic and genetic investigations
confirm that four regions of the S. tropica CNB-440 genome,
consisting of two gene clusters and two independent genes, contribute to the
in vivo production of a single carotenoid. This compound,
namely
(2’S)-1’-(β-D-glucopyranosyloxy)-3’,4’-didehydro-1’,2’-dihydro-φ,ψ-caroten-2’-ol,
is novel and has been given the trivial name “sioxanthin”.
Sioxanthin is a C40-carotenoid, glycosylated on one end of the
molecule and containing an aryl moiety on the opposite end. Glycosylation is
unusual amongst actinomycete carotenoids, and sioxanthin joins a rare group of
carotenoids with polar and non-polar head groups. Gene sequence homology
predicts that the sioxanthin biosynthetic pathway is present in all of the
Salinispora as well as other members of the family
Micromonosporaceae. Additionally, this study’s investigations of
clustering of carotenoid biosynthetic genes in heterotrophic bacteria show that
a non-clustered genome arrangement is more common than previously suggested,
with nearly half of the investigated genomes showing a non-clustered
architecture.
This study increases the number of resident Escherichia coli genome sequences, and explores E. coli diversity through longitudinal sampling. We investigate the genomes of E. coli isolated from human gastrointestinal tracts as part of an antibiotic treatment program among rural Tanzanian children. Phylogenomics demonstrates that resident E. coli are diverse, even within a single host. Though the E. coli isolates of the gastrointestinal community tend to be phylogenomically similar at a given time, they differed across the interrogated time points, demonstrating the variability of the members of the E. coli community in these subjects. Exposure to antibiotic treatment did not have an apparent impact on the E. coli community or the presence of resistance and virulence genes within E. coli genomes. The findings of this study highlight the variable nature of specific bacterial members of the human gastrointestinal tract.
Research on human-associated E. coli tends to focus on pathogens, such as enterotoxigenic E. coli (ETEC) strains, which are a leading cause of diarrhea in developing countries. However, the severity of disease caused by these pathogens is thought to be influenced by the microbiome. The nonpathogenic E. coli community that resides in the human gastrointestinal tract may play a role in pathogen colonization and disease severity and may become a reservoir for virulence and antibiotic resistance genes. Our study used whole-genome sequencing of E. coli before, during, and after challenge with an archetype ETEC isolate, H10407, and antibiotic treatment to explore the diversity and resiliency of the resident E. coli population in response to the ecological disturbances caused by pathogen invasion and antibiotic treatment.
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