The Effects of Endohyphal Bacteria on Anti-Cancer and Anti-Malaria Metabolites of Endophytic Fungi

Endophytes - the diverse, ubiquitous microbes that inhabit healthy plant tissues-- have proven to play a promising role in advancements in medicine due to their bioactivity against many pathogenic agents- such as bacteria, cancer cell lines, and malarial parasites. Based on preliminary data, endohyp...

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Main Authors: Jung, Chan, Arnold, A. Elizabeth
Language:en
Published: The University of Arizona. 2012
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10150/244395
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spelling ndltd-arizona.edu-oai-arizona.openrepository.com-10150-2443952015-10-23T04:57:04Z The Effects of Endohyphal Bacteria on Anti-Cancer and Anti-Malaria Metabolites of Endophytic Fungi Jung, Chan Arnold, A. Elizabeth Endophytes - the diverse, ubiquitous microbes that inhabit healthy plant tissues-- have proven to play a promising role in advancements in medicine due to their bioactivity against many pathogenic agents- such as bacteria, cancer cell lines, and malarial parasites. Based on preliminary data, endohyphal bacteria that have been found to inhabit certain endophytes may affect their metabolite production. The goal of this study was to evaluate whether diverse bioactive endophytes harbor endohyphal bacteria, which frequently are fastidious and can’t be cultured independently. A molecular cloning approach, through which two PCR enzyme mixes were compared, revealed that 1 out of 14 bioactive endophytes screened was positive for endohyphal bacteria (7.14%). BLAST analysis of 16s rRNA sequence data indicated a top match to the genus Caulobacter, a Gram-negative genus of bacteria commonly found in soil and water. Previous work by colleagues has found related strains of endohyphal bacteria in other strains of endophytes, which brings attention to this particular bacterium in assessing endohyphal bacteria and their ecological roles. Further testing of endophytes immediately after isolation from plant tissue, rather than from long-term vouchers, might be more effective in documenting endohyphal bacteria. For those that do harbor detectable infections, curing the endophytes of their endohyphal bacteria then assessing their metabolic activity would reveal whether or not the bacteria plays a major role for metabolite production and efficiency of endophytes against pathogens. 2012-05 text Electronic Thesis http://hdl.handle.net/10150/244395 en Copyright © is held by the author. Digital access to this material is made possible by the University Libraries, University of Arizona. Further transmission, reproduction or presentation (such as public display or performance) of protected items is prohibited except with permission of the author. The University of Arizona.
collection NDLTD
language en
sources NDLTD
description Endophytes - the diverse, ubiquitous microbes that inhabit healthy plant tissues-- have proven to play a promising role in advancements in medicine due to their bioactivity against many pathogenic agents- such as bacteria, cancer cell lines, and malarial parasites. Based on preliminary data, endohyphal bacteria that have been found to inhabit certain endophytes may affect their metabolite production. The goal of this study was to evaluate whether diverse bioactive endophytes harbor endohyphal bacteria, which frequently are fastidious and can’t be cultured independently. A molecular cloning approach, through which two PCR enzyme mixes were compared, revealed that 1 out of 14 bioactive endophytes screened was positive for endohyphal bacteria (7.14%). BLAST analysis of 16s rRNA sequence data indicated a top match to the genus Caulobacter, a Gram-negative genus of bacteria commonly found in soil and water. Previous work by colleagues has found related strains of endohyphal bacteria in other strains of endophytes, which brings attention to this particular bacterium in assessing endohyphal bacteria and their ecological roles. Further testing of endophytes immediately after isolation from plant tissue, rather than from long-term vouchers, might be more effective in documenting endohyphal bacteria. For those that do harbor detectable infections, curing the endophytes of their endohyphal bacteria then assessing their metabolic activity would reveal whether or not the bacteria plays a major role for metabolite production and efficiency of endophytes against pathogens.
author Jung, Chan
Arnold, A. Elizabeth
spellingShingle Jung, Chan
Arnold, A. Elizabeth
The Effects of Endohyphal Bacteria on Anti-Cancer and Anti-Malaria Metabolites of Endophytic Fungi
author_facet Jung, Chan
Arnold, A. Elizabeth
author_sort Jung, Chan
title The Effects of Endohyphal Bacteria on Anti-Cancer and Anti-Malaria Metabolites of Endophytic Fungi
title_short The Effects of Endohyphal Bacteria on Anti-Cancer and Anti-Malaria Metabolites of Endophytic Fungi
title_full The Effects of Endohyphal Bacteria on Anti-Cancer and Anti-Malaria Metabolites of Endophytic Fungi
title_fullStr The Effects of Endohyphal Bacteria on Anti-Cancer and Anti-Malaria Metabolites of Endophytic Fungi
title_full_unstemmed The Effects of Endohyphal Bacteria on Anti-Cancer and Anti-Malaria Metabolites of Endophytic Fungi
title_sort effects of endohyphal bacteria on anti-cancer and anti-malaria metabolites of endophytic fungi
publisher The University of Arizona.
publishDate 2012
url http://hdl.handle.net/10150/244395
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