Isolation, Phylogenetic Analysis and Antibiotic Activity Screening of Red Sea Sponge-Associated Actinobacteria

Infectious disease has always been and will continue to be a heavy burden on human society worldwide. Terrestrial actinobacteria, notable as a source of antibiotics, have been well investigated in the past. In constrast, marine actinobacteria, especially sponge-associated species, have received much...

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Main Author: Yang, Chen
Other Authors: Ravasi, Timothy
Language:en
Published: 2013
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10754/293817
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spelling ndltd-kaust.edu.sa-oai-repository.kaust.edu.sa-10754-2938172020-08-20T05:07:23Z Isolation, Phylogenetic Analysis and Antibiotic Activity Screening of Red Sea Sponge-Associated Actinobacteria Yang, Chen Ravasi, Timothy Biological and Environmental Sciences and Engineering (BESE) Division Hentschel, Ute Stingl, Ulrich Voolstra, Christian R. marine sponges actinobacteria antibiotic activity Infectious disease has always been and will continue to be a heavy burden on human society worldwide. Terrestrial actinobacteria, notable as a source of antibiotics, have been well investigated in the past. In constrast, marine actinobacteria, especially sponge-associated species, have received much less attention and isolates are sparse. With the aim of studying and discovering novel marine actinobacteria, 11 different species of sponges were collected from the Central Red Sea in Saudi Arabia and cultured with three different types of media. 16S rRNA gene-sequencing revealed that among all 75 isolated bacterial strains 13 belonged to the order actinomycetales. These 13 actinomycetes fall into four different families and can be assigned to six different genera. Antibiotic activity tests using disc diffusion assay were performed against Gram-positive bacteria (Bacillus sp.), Gram-negative bacteria (Escherichia coli), fungi (Fusarium sp.) and West Nile virus NS3 protease. Nine strains presented different level of bioactivity against these pathogens. These findings provide evidence that actinomycetes are presented in marine sponges and that they have the potential to be good candidates in the search for new effective antibiotic, antifungal, and antiviral compounds. 2013-06-11T12:59:52Z 2013-06-11T00:00:00Z 2013-06 Thesis 10.25781/KAUST-Z1N12 http://hdl.handle.net/10754/293817 en 2013-06-11 At the time of archiving, the student author of this thesis opted to temporarily restrict access to it. The full text of this thesis became available to the public after the expiration of the embargo on 2013-06-11.
collection NDLTD
language en
sources NDLTD
topic marine sponges
actinobacteria
antibiotic activity
spellingShingle marine sponges
actinobacteria
antibiotic activity
Yang, Chen
Isolation, Phylogenetic Analysis and Antibiotic Activity Screening of Red Sea Sponge-Associated Actinobacteria
description Infectious disease has always been and will continue to be a heavy burden on human society worldwide. Terrestrial actinobacteria, notable as a source of antibiotics, have been well investigated in the past. In constrast, marine actinobacteria, especially sponge-associated species, have received much less attention and isolates are sparse. With the aim of studying and discovering novel marine actinobacteria, 11 different species of sponges were collected from the Central Red Sea in Saudi Arabia and cultured with three different types of media. 16S rRNA gene-sequencing revealed that among all 75 isolated bacterial strains 13 belonged to the order actinomycetales. These 13 actinomycetes fall into four different families and can be assigned to six different genera. Antibiotic activity tests using disc diffusion assay were performed against Gram-positive bacteria (Bacillus sp.), Gram-negative bacteria (Escherichia coli), fungi (Fusarium sp.) and West Nile virus NS3 protease. Nine strains presented different level of bioactivity against these pathogens. These findings provide evidence that actinomycetes are presented in marine sponges and that they have the potential to be good candidates in the search for new effective antibiotic, antifungal, and antiviral compounds.
author2 Ravasi, Timothy
author_facet Ravasi, Timothy
Yang, Chen
author Yang, Chen
author_sort Yang, Chen
title Isolation, Phylogenetic Analysis and Antibiotic Activity Screening of Red Sea Sponge-Associated Actinobacteria
title_short Isolation, Phylogenetic Analysis and Antibiotic Activity Screening of Red Sea Sponge-Associated Actinobacteria
title_full Isolation, Phylogenetic Analysis and Antibiotic Activity Screening of Red Sea Sponge-Associated Actinobacteria
title_fullStr Isolation, Phylogenetic Analysis and Antibiotic Activity Screening of Red Sea Sponge-Associated Actinobacteria
title_full_unstemmed Isolation, Phylogenetic Analysis and Antibiotic Activity Screening of Red Sea Sponge-Associated Actinobacteria
title_sort isolation, phylogenetic analysis and antibiotic activity screening of red sea sponge-associated actinobacteria
publishDate 2013
url http://hdl.handle.net/10754/293817
work_keys_str_mv AT yangchen isolationphylogeneticanalysisandantibioticactivityscreeningofredseaspongeassociatedactinobacteria
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