吕德曼假说的检验:从营养有限的环境中生长缓慢的微生物中发现新的抗菌剂。

IF 3.1 2区 生物学 Q2 MICROBIOLOGY
mSphere Pub Date : 2025-09-23 DOI:10.1128/msphere.00367-25
Brendan Lin, Sunmin Woo, Alesa Philbrick, John Bacsa, Emily Laskey, Nancy Mehra, Vijay S Gondil, Jia A Mei, George Jones, Martin S Pavelka, Michelle Dziejman, Daniel A Shutter, Christian Melander, Alexander M Perritt, Rick Jakober, Yaoyao Shen, Wei-Chen Chang, Cassandra L Quave, Paul M Dunman, George Luedemann
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引用次数: 0

摘要

乔治·吕德曼在抗菌剂界是众所周知的天然产物抗生素庆大霉素的发现者之一。他随后假设,生长缓慢的生物居住在不适宜居住的、营养有限的环境中,可能代表了以前未描述的微生物的丰富来源,这些微生物产生新的抗菌剂,以创造对生长较快的竞争对手的竞争优势。因此,在Luedemann博士于2000年去世之前,从沙漠岩石表面分离出750种生长缓慢的微生物并将其存档。在这里,我们描述了Luedemann集合的前147个成员的特性和抗菌筛选。16S rRNA和全基因组测序显示,中试分离物具有高度的多样性,包括与土壤样品相关的新微生物物种,包括嗜地菌、链霉菌和小单孢菌。抗菌筛选和比较基因组学表明,至少有6个成员可能产生对ESKAPE病原体、霍乱弧菌和/或耻垢分枝杆菌有活性的新型抗菌药物。事实上,我们发现文库成员“9005BA”产生了一种新鉴定的吩那嗪,pyocyanin a,对鲍曼不动杆菌具有强效(0.625µg/mL)、选择性杀菌活性,并对动物有效。遗传和生化分析表明,pyocyanin A的抗菌活性可能是由氧化应激介导的,可以通过改变细菌呼吸和/或外排来克服。综上所述,这些数据表明,生长缓慢的生物体生活在营养有限的环境中,是以前被忽视的微生物和抗菌剂多样性的丰富来源。新细菌种类的发现和研究为鉴定新的微生物生物学过程、分子机制和次级代谢物(如新的抗生素)提供了机会。我们的工作表明,生长缓慢的生物体居住在营养有限的环境可能代表了新的微生物物种的丰富来源。此外,我们发现这些生物的一个子集可能会产生相应的新型抗菌剂,可能是作为一种手段来竞争更快增长的竞争对手。事实上,我们表明,一个假定的新的链霉菌物种能够产生以前未描述的抗菌剂,pyocyanin a,对鲍曼不动杆菌具有强效的选择性抗菌,鲍曼不动杆菌是抗生素耐药感染的主要原因。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Testing the Luedemann hypothesis: the discovery of novel antimicrobials from slow-growing microbes from nutrient-limited environments.

George Luedemann is known throughout the antimicrobial community as one of the discoverers of the natural product antibiotic gentamicin. He subsequently hypothesized that slow-growing organisms inhabiting inhospitable, nutrient-limited environments may represent an enriched source of previously undescribed microbes that produce novel antimicrobials to create a competitive advantage over faster-growing rival organisms. Accordingly, 750 slow-growing microorganisms were isolated from desert rock surfaces and archived prior to Dr. Luedemann's passing in 2000. Here, we describe the characterization and antimicrobial screening of the first 147 members of the Luedemann collection. 16S rRNA and whole-genome sequencing revealed that the pilot isolate set is highly diverse and includes novel microbial species belonging to genera commonly associated with soil samples, including Geodermatophilus, Streptomyces, and Micromonospora. Antimicrobial screening and comparative genomics indicate that at least six members are likely to produce novel antimicrobials with activity toward the ESKAPE pathogens, Vibrio cholerae and/or Mycobacterium smegmatis. Indeed, we show that the library member "9005BA" produces a newly identified phenazine, pyocyanin A, which displays potent (0.625 µg/mL), selective bactericidal activity toward Acinetobacter baumannii and efficacy in animals. Genetic and biochemical assays revealed that the antimicrobial activity of pyocyanin A is likely to be mediated by oxidative stress and can be overcome by altering bacterial respiration and/or efflux. Taken together, the data suggest that slow-growing organisms inhabiting nutrient-limited environments represent a previously overlooked rich source of microbial and antimicrobial agent diversity.IMPORTANCEThe discovery and study of novel bacterial species offer an opportunity to identify new microbial biological processes, molecular mechanisms, and secondary metabolites, such as new antibiotics. Our work indicates that slow-growing organisms inhabiting nutrient-limited environments may represent an enriched source of novel microbial species. Furthermore, we find that a subset of these organisms is likely to produce corresponding novel antimicrobials, presumably as a means to outcompete faster-growing rival organisms. Indeed, we show that a putative new Streptomyces species is capable of producing a previously undescribed antimicrobial, pyocyanin A, with potent, selective antibacterial toward Acinetobacter baumannii, a prominent cause of antibiotic-resistant infections.

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来源期刊
mSphere
mSphere Immunology and Microbiology-Microbiology
CiteScore
8.50
自引率
2.10%
发文量
192
审稿时长
11 weeks
期刊介绍: mSphere™ is a multi-disciplinary open-access journal that will focus on rapid publication of fundamental contributions to our understanding of microbiology. Its scope will reflect the immense range of fields within the microbial sciences, creating new opportunities for researchers to share findings that are transforming our understanding of human health and disease, ecosystems, neuroscience, agriculture, energy production, climate change, evolution, biogeochemical cycling, and food and drug production. Submissions will be encouraged of all high-quality work that makes fundamental contributions to our understanding of microbiology. mSphere™ will provide streamlined decisions, while carrying on ASM''s tradition for rigorous peer review.
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