Abstract

In the postgenomic era, a new strategy for chemical dereplication of polyketide anti-infective drugs requires novel genomics and chromatographic strategies. An endosymbiotic fungal strain CLB38 was isolated from the root tissue of Combretum latifolium Blume (Combretaceae) which was collected from the Western Ghats of India. The isolate CLB38 was then identified as Emericella variecolor by its characteristic stellate ascospores culture morphology and molecular analysis of ITS nuclear rDNA and intervening 5.8S rRNA gene sequence. ITS2 RNA secondary structure modeling clearly distinguished fungal endosymbiont E. variecolor CLB38 with other lifestyles in the same monophyletic clade. Ethyl acetate fraction of CLB38 explored a broad spectrum of antimicrobial activity against multidrug resistant pathogens. Biosynthetic PKS type-I gene and chromatographic approach afford two polyketide antimicrobial compounds which identified as evariquinone and isoindolones derivative emerimidine A. MIC of purified compounds against test microorganisms ranged between 3.12 μg/ml and 12.5 μg/ml. This research highlights the utility of E. variecolor CLB38 as an anticipate source for anti-infective polyketide metabolites evariquinone and emerimidine A to combat multidrug resistant microorganisms. Here we demonstrates a chemogenomics strategy via the feasibility of PKS type-I gene and chromatographic approach as a proficient method for the rapid prediction and discovery of new polyketides compounds from fungal endosymbionts.

Highlights

  • Novel antimicrobial drugs derived from fungal endosymbionts with the unique and targeted mode of action are fundamental to fight against multidrug-resistant microorganisms[1].PLOS ONE | DOI:10.1371/journal.pone.0172848 February 28, 2017Chemogenomics driven discovery of polyketide anti-infective drugs from Emericella variecolor CLB38

  • A fungal endosymbiont E. variecolorCLB38was isolated from the asymptomatic root of C. latifolium Blume

  • This work demonstrates a holistic strategy for the rapid detection of antimicrobial polyketide metabolites from endosymbiotic fungi

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Summary

Introduction

Novel antimicrobial drugs derived from fungal endosymbionts with the unique and targeted mode of action are fundamental to fight against multidrug-resistant microorganisms[1]. Endosymbiotic fungi are an eclectic group of microbes having the power to chemically colligate the bridge between microbes and medicinal plants due to their relatively high metabolic versatility [3].They securely establish endophyte–endophyte and plant-endophyte interactions, which play a vital role in the biosynthesis of anti-infective metabolites [4]. They are highly considered as unexploited drug sources capable of producing novel anti-infective metabolites [5]. Polyketides constitute a diverse group of secondary metabolites found across bacteria, fungi, plants and some marine microorganisms which play an important role in drug discovery from natural resources [9]. We discuss the merits of this genomic and metabolomic approach for the rapid detection of PKS-type I genes which facilities biodiscovery of polyketide antimicrobial compounds

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