Abstract

Microbial endophytes produce specialized metabolites, including antibiotics and other compounds of pharmaceutical and agricultural value. This study aimed to investigate the diversity and bioactivity of endophytes from medicinal plants used by the Dharawal People of Gamay (Botany Bay), Australia. Of the 48 endophytes isolated, 19 tested positive for polyketide synthase or non-ribosomal peptide synthetase genes via a PCR incorporating degenerate primers. The biosynthetically talented endophytes were identified by 16S rRNA gene sequencing and included four bacteria species belonging to the orders Bacillales, Rhizobiales and Burkholderiales, and fifteen Ascomycota fungi species belonging to the orders Botryosphaeriales, Cladosporiales, Glomerellales, Microascales and Eurotiales. Antimicrobial testing using the disc diffusion assay demonstrated that 15 of the 19 isolates had broad-spectrum activity against a range of Gram-positive and Gram-negative bacteria. Taken together, these results suggest that Australian bush medicines harbour diverse biosynthetically talented microbial endophytes capable of producing broad-spectrum antibacterial compounds. This study suggests that compounds produced by microbial endophytes likely contribute to the collective medicinal properties of Australian bush medicines. Significantly, it highlights that Indigenous botanical knowledge and modern molecular approaches can be used in tandem to prioritize microorganisms that produce pharmaceutically relevant compounds.

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