4.6 Article

Biosynthetic Potential of the Endophytic Fungus Helotiales sp. BL73 Revealed via Compound Identification and Genome Mining

Journal

APPLIED AND ENVIRONMENTAL MICROBIOLOGY
Volume 88, Issue 6, Pages -

Publisher

AMER SOC MICROBIOLOGY
DOI: 10.1128/aem.02510-21

Keywords

endophytic fungus; secondary metabolites; biosynthetic gene clusters; genome mining

Funding

  1. Mass Spectrometry Centre of the Faculty of Chemistry, University of Vienna

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Endophytic fungi have the potential to produce diverse secondary metabolites. In this study, a Helotiales isolate from Bergenia pacumbis was found to produce bioactive secondary metabolites. Genome sequencing revealed numerous secondary metabolite biosynthesis gene clusters, and heterologous gene expression in Streptomyces bacteria showed the production of terpenoids. The study highlights the importance of a comprehensive approach combining traditional methods and genome mining to investigate the biosynthetic potential of endophytic fungi.
Endophytic fungi have been recognized as prolific producers of chemically diverse secondary metabolites. In this work, we describe a new representative of the order Helotiales isolated from the medicinal plant Bergenia pacumbis. Several bioactive secondary metabolites were produced by this Helotiales sp. BL 73 isolate grown on rice medium, including cochlioquinones and isofusidienols. Sequencing and analysis of the approximately 59-Mb genome revealed at least 77 secondary metabolite biosynthesis gene clusters, of which several could be associated with detected compounds or linked to previously reported molecules. Four terpene synthase genes identified in the BL73 genome were codon optimized and expressed, together with farnesyl-, geranyl-, and geranylgeranyl-pyrophosphate synthases, in Streptomyces spp. An analysis of recombinant strains revealed the production of linalool and its oxidized form, terpenoids typically associated with plants, as well as a yet unidentified terpenoid. This study demonstrates the importance of a complex approach to the investigation of the biosynthetic potential of endophytic fungi using both conventional methods and genome mining. IMPORTANCE Endophytic fungi represent an as yet underexplored source of secondary metabolites, of which some may have industrial and medical applications. We isolated a slow-growing fungus belonging to the order Helotiales from the traditional medicinal plant Bergenia pacumbis and characterized its potential to biosynthesize secondary metabolites. We used cultivation of the isolate with a subsequent analysis of compounds produced, bioinformatics-based mining of the genome, and heterologous expression of several terpene synthase genes. Our study revealed that this Helotiales isolate has enormous potential to produce structurally diverse natural products, including polyketides, nonribosomally synthesized peptides, terpenoids, and ribosomally synthesized and posttranslationally modified peptides (RiPP5). Identification of meroterpenoids and xanthones, along with establishing a link between these molecules and their putative biosynthetic genes, sets the stage for investigation of the respective biosynthetic pathways. The heterologous production of terpenoids suggests that this approach can be used for the discovery of new compounds belonging to this chemical class using Streptomyces bacteria as hosts.

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