Abstract

Simple SummaryBiosurfactants are amphiphilic molecules produced by microorganisms with a hydrophilic and a hydrophobic group, able to reduce surface tension. These molecules are largely used in the environmental, food, pharmaceutical, medical, and cleaning industries, among others. Serratia strains are ubiquitous microorganisms with the ability to produce biosurfactants, such as serrawettins. These extracellular lipopeptides are described as biocides against many bacteria and fungi. This work used comparative genomics to determine the distribution and organization of the serrawettins W1 and W2 biosynthetic gene clusters in all the 84 publicly available genomes of the Serratia genus. Here, the serrawettin W1 gene clusters’ organization is reported for the first time. The serrawettin W1 biosynthetic gene swrW and serrawettin W2 biosynthetic gene swrA were present in 17 and 11 Serratia genomes, respectively. The same genes in the biosynthetic clusters frame the swrW and swrA biosynthetic genes. This work identified four genes common to all serrawettin gene clusters, highlighting their key potential in the serrawettins biosynthetic process.Serratia strains are ubiquitous microorganisms with the ability to produce serratomolides, such as serrawettins. These extracellular lipopeptides are described as biocides against many bacteria and fungi and may have a nematicidal activity against phytopathogenic nematodes. Serrawettins W1 and W2 from different strains have different structures that might be correlated with distinct genomic organizations. This work used comparative genomics to determine the distribution and the organization of the serrawettins biosynthetic gene clusters in all the 84 publicly available genomes of the Serratia genus. The serrawettin W1 and W2 gene clusters’ organization was established using antiSMASH software and compared with single and short data previously described for YD25T Serratia. Here, the serrawettin W1 gene clusters’ organization is reported for the first time. The serrawettin W1 biosynthetic gene swrW was present in 17 Serratia genomes. Eighty different coding sequence (CDS) were assigned to the W1 gene cluster, 13 being common to all clusters. The serrawettin W2 swrA gene was present in 11 Serratia genomes. The W2 gene clusters included 68 CDS with 24 present in all the clusters. The genomic analysis showed the swrA gene constitutes five modules, four with three domains and one with four domains, while the swrW gene constitutes one module with four domains. This work identified four genes common to all serrawettin gene clusters, highlighting their essential potential in the serrawettins biosynthetic process.

Highlights

  • Surfactants are amphiphilic molecules with a hydrophilic and a hydrophobic group, able to reduce surface tension

  • Serratiastrains strainsselected selectedfor forthis thisstudy studyhad hadtheir theirgenome genomepublicly publiclyavailable availableatatNCBI

  • Serrawettins were first reported in pigmented S. marcescens [4] and 53.6% of Serratia strains that showed the swrW or swrA genes clusters in our study belonged to this species

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Surfactants are amphiphilic molecules with a hydrophilic and a hydrophobic group, able to reduce surface tension. Biosurfactants are secondary metabolites produced by bacteria, yeast, or fungi, capable of reducing the surface tension of extracellular media [4]. They can have a variety of structures, mainly divided into six major groups, namely, glycolipids, lipopolysaccharides, lipopeptides and phospholipids, and hydroxylated and cross-linked fatty acids [5]. Bacterial species of the genus Serratia belonging to the family Enterobacteriaceae are Gram-negative, facultative anaerobic, and rod-shaped bacteria [7,8] They have been isolated from different environments, such as water, soil, plants, insects, and vertebrates [9]. Bacteria from the genus Serratia produce biosurfactants (extracellular lipopeptides) as the serratomolides serrawettin W1 [10], serrawettin W2 [4], and serrawettin W3 [11]

Methods
Discussion
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call