Return to search

The isolation and characterisation of novel natural products from marine bacterial symbionts

>Magister Scientiae - MSc / Drug-resistant infections are a global health crisis and drastically hinder the treatment options to effectively combat disease. Today, natural products remain an important source of novel drug candidates. Micro-organisms, in addition to being a source of bioactive natural products, represent a sustainable source of these compounds. As the marine environment is largely underexplored, the oceans represent a potential source of novel NPs. This study aimed at the discovery of novel NPs from bacteria associated with novel marine invertebrate species endemic to the South African coast, including a sponge Spongia (Spongia) sp. 001RSASPN and a tunicate, Pseudodistoma africanum Millar, 1954. The methodology comprised of culture-dependent and culture-independent strategies. The former involved the isolation of bacteria associated with the invertebrate species and subsequent screening for anti-microbial activity against a panel of indicator strains including a multi-drug resistant E. coli strain. Anti-bacterial activity was detected in 6.1% and 4% of bacterial isolates from the sponge and tunicate isolates respectively. The culture-independent strategy involved the use of PCR to select bioactive strains likely to contain novel NRPS or PKS secondary metabolite pathways. An NRPS A- domain exhibiting low sequence identity (65%) to reference sequences in the NCBI database was amplified from isolate PE8-15, a strain belonging to the genus Bacillus. This predicted a novel NRPS pathway within this strain. In addition, this isolate exhibited the most diverse anti-microbial profile including anti-bacterial and anti-fungal activity (A.fumigatus ATCC 46645). Therefore, as the most promising candidate, the genome of PE8-15 was sequenced following which 10 secondary metabolite pathways including bacteriocins (5), NRPS (3), siderophore (1) and a terpene pathway were identified. The A-domain amplified from PE8-15 originated from Cluster 4, and NRPS pathway predicted to encode a lipopeptide. Lipopeptides are an important class of compounds with a range of industrial applications in the pharmaceutical, cosmetic as well as food industry. The identification of potentially novel secondary metabolite pathways from even well- studied groups of organisms demonstrates the importance of sequence-based methods in natural product discovery. Furthermore, this study highlights the South African coast as a rich source of microbial natural products and should be exploited further for drug discovery.

Identiferoai:union.ndltd.org:netd.ac.za/oai:union.ndltd.org:uwc/oai:etd.uwc.ac.za:11394/4747
Date January 2015
CreatorsKlein, Timothy Matsiko Ninsiima
ContributorsTuffin, Marla
PublisherUniversity of the Western Cape
Source SetsSouth African National ETD Portal
LanguageEnglish
Detected LanguageEnglish
RightsUniversity of the Western Cape

Page generated in 0.0019 seconds