Culturing marine bacteria from the genus Pseudoalteromonas on a cotton scaffold alters secondary metabolite production

Abstract The discovery of secondary metabolites from marine microorganisms is beset by numerous challenges including difficulties cultivating and subsequently eliciting expression of biosynthetic genes from marine microbes in the laboratory. In this paper, we describe a method of culturing three spe...

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Main Authors: Marshall L. Timmermans, Katherine J. Picott, Lorena Ucciferri, Avena C. Ross
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Wiley 2019-05-01
Series:MicrobiologyOpen
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1002/mbo3.724
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spelling doaj-bbf1dbdb03fd48d082da81ff4ea9816c2020-11-25T00:48:27ZengWileyMicrobiologyOpen2045-88272019-05-0185n/an/a10.1002/mbo3.724Culturing marine bacteria from the genus Pseudoalteromonas on a cotton scaffold alters secondary metabolite productionMarshall L. Timmermans0Katherine J. Picott1Lorena Ucciferri2Avena C. Ross3Department of Chemistry Queen's University Kingston ON CanadaDepartment of Chemistry Queen's University Kingston ON CanadaDepartment of Chemistry Queen's University Kingston ON CanadaDepartment of Chemistry Queen's University Kingston ON CanadaAbstract The discovery of secondary metabolites from marine microorganisms is beset by numerous challenges including difficulties cultivating and subsequently eliciting expression of biosynthetic genes from marine microbes in the laboratory. In this paper, we describe a method of culturing three species from the marine bacterial genus Pseudoalteromonas using cotton scaffold supplemented liquid media. This simple cultivation method was designed to mimic the natural behavior of some members of the genus wherein they form epibiotic/symbiotic associations with higher organisms such as sponges and corals or attach to solid structures as a biofilm. Our scaffolded cultivation is highly effective at stimulating an attachment/biofilm phenotype and causes large changes to metabolite profiles for the microbes investigated. Metabolite changes include alteration to the production levels of known molecules such as violacein, thiomarinol A, and the alterochromide and prodiginine families of molecules. Finally and critically, our technique stimulates the production of unknown compounds that will serve as leads for future natural product discovery. These results suggest our cultivation approach could potentially be used as a general strategy for the activation of silent gene clusters in marine microbes to facilitate access to their full natural product biosynthetic capacity.https://doi.org/10.1002/mbo3.724biofilmmarine bacteriametabolite profilingnatural productsproteobacteriapseudoalteromonas
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Marshall L. Timmermans
Katherine J. Picott
Lorena Ucciferri
Avena C. Ross
spellingShingle Marshall L. Timmermans
Katherine J. Picott
Lorena Ucciferri
Avena C. Ross
Culturing marine bacteria from the genus Pseudoalteromonas on a cotton scaffold alters secondary metabolite production
MicrobiologyOpen
biofilm
marine bacteria
metabolite profiling
natural products
proteobacteria
pseudoalteromonas
author_facet Marshall L. Timmermans
Katherine J. Picott
Lorena Ucciferri
Avena C. Ross
author_sort Marshall L. Timmermans
title Culturing marine bacteria from the genus Pseudoalteromonas on a cotton scaffold alters secondary metabolite production
title_short Culturing marine bacteria from the genus Pseudoalteromonas on a cotton scaffold alters secondary metabolite production
title_full Culturing marine bacteria from the genus Pseudoalteromonas on a cotton scaffold alters secondary metabolite production
title_fullStr Culturing marine bacteria from the genus Pseudoalteromonas on a cotton scaffold alters secondary metabolite production
title_full_unstemmed Culturing marine bacteria from the genus Pseudoalteromonas on a cotton scaffold alters secondary metabolite production
title_sort culturing marine bacteria from the genus pseudoalteromonas on a cotton scaffold alters secondary metabolite production
publisher Wiley
series MicrobiologyOpen
issn 2045-8827
publishDate 2019-05-01
description Abstract The discovery of secondary metabolites from marine microorganisms is beset by numerous challenges including difficulties cultivating and subsequently eliciting expression of biosynthetic genes from marine microbes in the laboratory. In this paper, we describe a method of culturing three species from the marine bacterial genus Pseudoalteromonas using cotton scaffold supplemented liquid media. This simple cultivation method was designed to mimic the natural behavior of some members of the genus wherein they form epibiotic/symbiotic associations with higher organisms such as sponges and corals or attach to solid structures as a biofilm. Our scaffolded cultivation is highly effective at stimulating an attachment/biofilm phenotype and causes large changes to metabolite profiles for the microbes investigated. Metabolite changes include alteration to the production levels of known molecules such as violacein, thiomarinol A, and the alterochromide and prodiginine families of molecules. Finally and critically, our technique stimulates the production of unknown compounds that will serve as leads for future natural product discovery. These results suggest our cultivation approach could potentially be used as a general strategy for the activation of silent gene clusters in marine microbes to facilitate access to their full natural product biosynthetic capacity.
topic biofilm
marine bacteria
metabolite profiling
natural products
proteobacteria
pseudoalteromonas
url https://doi.org/10.1002/mbo3.724
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