Natural products from Actinobacteria associated with fungus-growing termites
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Date
Authors
Benndorf, Rene
Guo, Huijuan
Sommerwerk, Elisabeth
Weigel, Christiane
Garcia-Altares, Maria
Martin, Karin
Hu, Haofu
Kufner, Michelle
De Beer, Z. Wilhelm
Poulsen, Michael
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
MDPI Publishing
Abstract
The chemical analysis of insect-associated Actinobacteria has attracted the interest of
natural product chemists in the past years as bacterial-produced metabolites are sought to be crucial
for sustaining and protecting the insect host. The objective of our study was to evaluate the phylogeny
and bioprospecting of Actinobacteria associated with fungus-growing termites. We characterized 97
Actinobacteria from the gut, exoskeleton, and fungus garden (comb) of the fungus-growing termite
Macrotermes natalensis and used two different bioassays to assess their general antimicrobial activity.
We selected two strains for chemical analysis and investigated the culture broth of the axenic strains
and fungus-actinobacterium co-cultures. From these studies, we identified the previously-reported
PKS-derived barceloneic acid A and the PKS-derived rubterolones. Analysis of culture broth yielded
a new dichlorinated diketopiperazine derivative and two new tetracyclic lanthipeptides, named
rubrominins A and B. The discussed natural products highlight that insect-associated Actinobacteria
are highly prolific natural product producers yielding important chemical scaffolds urgently needed
for future drug development programs.
Description
Keywords
Actinobacteria, Symbiosis, Secondary metabolites, Drug discovery, Chemical ecology
Sustainable Development Goals
Citation
Benndorf, R., Guo, H., Sommerwerk, E. et al. 2018, 'Natural products from
Actinobacteria associated with fungus-growing termites', Antibotics, vol. 7, no. 3, art. 83, pp. 1-25.