4.5 Article

Unveiling the genomic potential of Pseudomonas type strains for discovering new natural products

Journal

MICROBIAL GENOMICS
Volume 8, Issue 2, Pages -

Publisher

MICROBIOLOGY SOC
DOI: 10.1099/mgen.0.000758

Keywords

BGCs; BiG-SCAPE / CORASON; comparative genomics; EvoMining; pan-genome; secondary metabolites

Funding

  1. Regional Government of Castile and Leon
  2. Regional Government of Castile and Leon (Escalera de Excelencia) [CLU-2018-04]
  3. Operational Program of the European Regional Development Fund for Castile and Leon 2014-2020

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Microbes produce a wide range of secondary metabolites with various biological activities through biosynthetic gene clusters. This study focuses on the genus Pseudomonas and reveals the main biosynthetic systems related to secondary metabolism, investigates the evolutionary processes that drive the diversification of their coding regions, and identifies Pseudomonas strains with potential for producing useful natural products. The results show that Pseudomonas type strains predominantly encode non-ribosomal peptide synthetases, bacteriocins, N-acetylglutaminylglutamine amides and beta-lactones.
Microbes host a huge variety of biosynthetic gene clusters that produce an immeasurable array of secondary metabolites with many different biological activities such as antimicrobial, anticarcinogenic and antiviral. Despite the complex task of isolating and characterizing novel natural products, microbial genomic strategies can be useful for carrying out these types of studies. However, although genomic-based research on secondary metabolism is on the increase, there is still a lack of reports focusing specifically on the genus Pseudomonas. In this work, we aimed (i) to unveil the main biosynthetic systems related to secondary metabolism in Pseudomonas type strains, (ii) to study the evolutionary processes that drive the diversification of their coding regions and (iii) to select Pseudomonas strains showing promising results in the search for useful natural products. We performed a comparative genomic study on 194 Pseudomonas species, paying special attention to the evolution and distribution of different classes of biosynthetic gene clusters and the coding features of antimicrobial peptides. Using EvoMining, a bioinformatic approach for studying evolutionary processes related to secondary metabolism, we sought to decipher the protein expansion of enzymes related to the lipid metabolism, which may have evolved toward the biosynthesis of novel secondary metabolites in Pseudomonas. The types of metabolites encoded in Pseudomonas type strains were predominantly non-ribosomal peptide synthetases, bacteriocins, N-acetylglutaminylglutamine amides and beta-lactones. Also, the evolution of genes related to secondary metabolites was found to coincide with Pseudomonas species diversification. Interestingly, only a few Pseudomonas species encode polyketide synthases, which are related to the lipid metabolism broadly distributed among bacteria. Thus, our EvoMining-based search may help to discover new types of secondary metabolite gene clusters in which lipid-related enzymes are involved. This work provides information about uncharacterized metabolites produced by Pseudomonas type strains, whose gene clusters have evolved in a species-specific way. Our results provide novel insight into the secondary metabolism of Pseudomonas and will serve as a basis for the prioritization of the isolated strains. This article contains data hosted by Microreact.

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