Screening bacterial symbionts of marine invertebrates for ribosomally synthesized natural products

>Magister Scientiae - MSc === Pharmaceutical research and development strategies rely on the constant discovery of novel natural products as potential drugs. Recent studies have shown that the microorganisms associated with sponges are the true producers of some previously isolated compounds. T...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Hanekom, Thea
Other Authors: Trindade, Marla
Language:en
Published: University of the Western Cape 2017
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/11394/5441
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spelling ndltd-netd.ac.za-oai-union.ndltd.org-uwc-oai-etd.uwc.ac.za-11394-54412017-08-02T04:01:21Z Screening bacterial symbionts of marine invertebrates for ribosomally synthesized natural products Hanekom, Thea Trindade, Marla Metagenomics Symbiotic bacteria Ribosomal peptides Sponges >Magister Scientiae - MSc Pharmaceutical research and development strategies rely on the constant discovery of novel natural products as potential drugs. Recent studies have shown that the microorganisms associated with sponges are the true producers of some previously isolated compounds. This study created a large collection of bacterial symbionts associated with the South African marine sponge, Hamacantha esperioides. The bioactivity assays performed, showed that 44 isolates produced compounds with antimicrobial or anti-inflammatory activity. The successful identification of novel species that produce potential natural products highlights the importance of cultivation-dependent methods. To further screen for natural products, a cultivation-independent approach was used. A sequenced-based method, based on the biosynthetic genes of polytheonamide, was developed to screen for proteusins in sponge metagenomic DNA and the genomes of bacterial symbionts. The degenerate primers could amplify the targeted genes from DNA known to contain homologues. Evaluation of the primers' specificity showed non-specific amplification of genes, some containing similar conserved domains as the target genes. This study demonstrated that the use and development of cultivation-dependent and -independent screens are important for the discovery of novel natural products from the symbiotic bacteria of South African sponges. National Research Foundation (NRF) 2017-06-28T13:56:27Z 2017-06-28T13:56:27Z 2016 http://hdl.handle.net/11394/5441 en University of the Western Cape University of the Western Cape
collection NDLTD
language en
sources NDLTD
topic Metagenomics
Symbiotic bacteria
Ribosomal peptides
Sponges
spellingShingle Metagenomics
Symbiotic bacteria
Ribosomal peptides
Sponges
Hanekom, Thea
Screening bacterial symbionts of marine invertebrates for ribosomally synthesized natural products
description >Magister Scientiae - MSc === Pharmaceutical research and development strategies rely on the constant discovery of novel natural products as potential drugs. Recent studies have shown that the microorganisms associated with sponges are the true producers of some previously isolated compounds. This study created a large collection of bacterial symbionts associated with the South African marine sponge, Hamacantha esperioides. The bioactivity assays performed, showed that 44 isolates produced compounds with antimicrobial or anti-inflammatory activity. The successful identification of novel species that produce potential natural products highlights the importance of cultivation-dependent methods. To further screen for natural products, a cultivation-independent approach was used. A sequenced-based method, based on the biosynthetic genes of polytheonamide, was developed to screen for proteusins in sponge metagenomic DNA and the genomes of bacterial symbionts. The degenerate primers could amplify the targeted genes from DNA known to contain homologues. Evaluation of the primers' specificity showed non-specific amplification of genes, some containing similar conserved domains as the target genes. This study demonstrated that the use and development of cultivation-dependent and -independent screens are important for the discovery of novel natural products from the symbiotic bacteria of South African sponges. === National Research Foundation (NRF)
author2 Trindade, Marla
author_facet Trindade, Marla
Hanekom, Thea
author Hanekom, Thea
author_sort Hanekom, Thea
title Screening bacterial symbionts of marine invertebrates for ribosomally synthesized natural products
title_short Screening bacterial symbionts of marine invertebrates for ribosomally synthesized natural products
title_full Screening bacterial symbionts of marine invertebrates for ribosomally synthesized natural products
title_fullStr Screening bacterial symbionts of marine invertebrates for ribosomally synthesized natural products
title_full_unstemmed Screening bacterial symbionts of marine invertebrates for ribosomally synthesized natural products
title_sort screening bacterial symbionts of marine invertebrates for ribosomally synthesized natural products
publisher University of the Western Cape
publishDate 2017
url http://hdl.handle.net/11394/5441
work_keys_str_mv AT hanekomthea screeningbacterialsymbiontsofmarineinvertebratesforribosomallysynthesizednaturalproducts
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