From Discovery to Production: Biotechnology of Marine Fungi for the Production of New Antibiotics

Filamentous fungi are well known for their capability of producing antibiotic natural products. Recent studies have demonstrated the potential of antimicrobials with vast chemodiversity from marine fungi. Development of such natural products into lead compounds requires sustainable supply. Marine bi...

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Main Authors: Johanna Silber, Annemarie Kramer, Antje Labes, Deniz Tasdemir
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2016-07-01
Series:Marine Drugs
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.mdpi.com/1660-3397/14/7/137
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spelling doaj-aa862eda1f2540ea84e46b75cc7650cd2020-11-24T22:34:41ZengMDPI AGMarine Drugs1660-33972016-07-0114713710.3390/md14070137md14070137From Discovery to Production: Biotechnology of Marine Fungi for the Production of New AntibioticsJohanna Silber0Annemarie Kramer1Antje Labes2Deniz Tasdemir3GEOMAR Helmholtz Centre for Ocean Research Kiel, Marine Natural Products Chemistry Research Unit, GEOMAR Centre for Marine Biotechnology (GEOMAR-Biotech), Am Kiel-Kanal 44, Kiel 24106, GermanyGEOMAR Helmholtz Centre for Ocean Research Kiel, Marine Natural Products Chemistry Research Unit, GEOMAR Centre for Marine Biotechnology (GEOMAR-Biotech), Am Kiel-Kanal 44, Kiel 24106, GermanyGEOMAR Helmholtz Centre for Ocean Research Kiel, Marine Natural Products Chemistry Research Unit, GEOMAR Centre for Marine Biotechnology (GEOMAR-Biotech), Am Kiel-Kanal 44, Kiel 24106, GermanyGEOMAR Helmholtz Centre for Ocean Research Kiel, Marine Natural Products Chemistry Research Unit, GEOMAR Centre for Marine Biotechnology (GEOMAR-Biotech), Am Kiel-Kanal 44, Kiel 24106, GermanyFilamentous fungi are well known for their capability of producing antibiotic natural products. Recent studies have demonstrated the potential of antimicrobials with vast chemodiversity from marine fungi. Development of such natural products into lead compounds requires sustainable supply. Marine biotechnology can significantly contribute to the production of new antibiotics at various levels of the process chain including discovery, production, downstream processing, and lead development. However, the number of biotechnological processes described for large-scale production from marine fungi is far from the sum of the newly-discovered natural antibiotics. Methods and technologies applied in marine fungal biotechnology largely derive from analogous terrestrial processes and rarely reflect the specific demands of the marine fungi. The current developments in metabolic engineering and marine microbiology are not yet transferred into processes, but offer numerous options for improvement of production processes and establishment of new process chains. This review summarises the current state in biotechnological production of marine fungal antibiotics and points out the enormous potential of biotechnology in all stages of the discovery-to-development pipeline. At the same time, the literature survey reveals that more biotechnology transfer and method developments are needed for a sustainable and innovative production of marine fungal antibiotics.http://www.mdpi.com/1660-3397/14/7/137marine biotechnologytransfer to stirred tank reactorfull fermentative processsemi-synthesisbiological derivatisationfilamentous fungibioprocess developmentheterologous expressiongenetic and metabolic engineeringdownstream processing
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Johanna Silber
Annemarie Kramer
Antje Labes
Deniz Tasdemir
spellingShingle Johanna Silber
Annemarie Kramer
Antje Labes
Deniz Tasdemir
From Discovery to Production: Biotechnology of Marine Fungi for the Production of New Antibiotics
Marine Drugs
marine biotechnology
transfer to stirred tank reactor
full fermentative process
semi-synthesis
biological derivatisation
filamentous fungi
bioprocess development
heterologous expression
genetic and metabolic engineering
downstream processing
author_facet Johanna Silber
Annemarie Kramer
Antje Labes
Deniz Tasdemir
author_sort Johanna Silber
title From Discovery to Production: Biotechnology of Marine Fungi for the Production of New Antibiotics
title_short From Discovery to Production: Biotechnology of Marine Fungi for the Production of New Antibiotics
title_full From Discovery to Production: Biotechnology of Marine Fungi for the Production of New Antibiotics
title_fullStr From Discovery to Production: Biotechnology of Marine Fungi for the Production of New Antibiotics
title_full_unstemmed From Discovery to Production: Biotechnology of Marine Fungi for the Production of New Antibiotics
title_sort from discovery to production: biotechnology of marine fungi for the production of new antibiotics
publisher MDPI AG
series Marine Drugs
issn 1660-3397
publishDate 2016-07-01
description Filamentous fungi are well known for their capability of producing antibiotic natural products. Recent studies have demonstrated the potential of antimicrobials with vast chemodiversity from marine fungi. Development of such natural products into lead compounds requires sustainable supply. Marine biotechnology can significantly contribute to the production of new antibiotics at various levels of the process chain including discovery, production, downstream processing, and lead development. However, the number of biotechnological processes described for large-scale production from marine fungi is far from the sum of the newly-discovered natural antibiotics. Methods and technologies applied in marine fungal biotechnology largely derive from analogous terrestrial processes and rarely reflect the specific demands of the marine fungi. The current developments in metabolic engineering and marine microbiology are not yet transferred into processes, but offer numerous options for improvement of production processes and establishment of new process chains. This review summarises the current state in biotechnological production of marine fungal antibiotics and points out the enormous potential of biotechnology in all stages of the discovery-to-development pipeline. At the same time, the literature survey reveals that more biotechnology transfer and method developments are needed for a sustainable and innovative production of marine fungal antibiotics.
topic marine biotechnology
transfer to stirred tank reactor
full fermentative process
semi-synthesis
biological derivatisation
filamentous fungi
bioprocess development
heterologous expression
genetic and metabolic engineering
downstream processing
url http://www.mdpi.com/1660-3397/14/7/137
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