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Genomic and metagenomic approaches to natural product chemistry

For many years, natural products have been a primary source of new molecules for the
treatment of disease, and microorganisms have been a prolific source of these molecules. Recent
studies have indicated, however, that many biosynthetic pathways are present in organisms for
which no natural product can be associated, and only a small fraction of the microbial life
present in the environment can be grown in culture. This indicates that if methods could be
developed for the isolation of these pathways and production of their target molecules in
heterologous hosts, great numbers of potentially valuable compounds might be discovered.
In these investigations, large insert libraries of two microorganisms were constructed,
one a bacterial artificial chromosome (BAC) library, the other a fosmid library, and two large
insert fosmid libraries were constructed with DNA isolated from marine environmental samples.
A mathematical formula was derived to estimate probabilities of cloning intact biosynthetic
pathways with large insert genomic libraries and tested with a computer simulation. This
indicated that even large pathways could be cloned intact in large insert libraries, provided there
was an adequate size difference between the target pathway and the library inserts, and there was
a concomitant increase in the size of the library with the targeting of these larger pathways. In
addition, an investigation into a mixed marine culture sample lead to the identification of an
unusual relationship between two bacteria for which extended co-culture leads to the production
of pyocyanin. However, no useful biosynthetic pathways were located within the genomic
libraries.
It is concluded that significant improvements would be required to make this approach
feasible for larger scale investigations. It is further concluded, on the basis of recent
developments in the field, including a reduction in the cost of sequencing, improvements in techniques of whole-genome shotgun sequencing, and the development of recombination based
cloning, that the employment of mass sequencing efforts and sequence-driven, recombinationbased
cloning, might prove to be a more fruitful and efficient alternative to large-insert library
construction for the isolation and expression of these pathways. A possible paradigm for the
cloning of pathways on the basis of this technology is proposed.

Identiferoai:union.ndltd.org:tamu.edu/oai:repository.tamu.edu:1969.1/ETD-TAMU-2671
Date15 May 2009
CreatorsAngell, Scott Edward
ContributorsWatanabe, Coran
Source SetsTexas A and M University
Languageen_US
Detected LanguageEnglish
TypeBook, Thesis, Electronic Dissertation, text
Formatelectronic, application/pdf, born digital

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