4.5 Article

The detection of diverse aminoglycoside phosphotransferases within natural populations of actinomycetes

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OXFORD UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1038/sj.jim.7000260

Keywords

phosphotransferase; screening; antibiotic resistance; evolution; actinomycete ecology

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The conserved nature of the genes that code for actinomycete secondary metabolite biosynthetic pathways suggests a common evolutionary ancestor and incidences of lateral gene transfer. Resistance genes associated with these biosynthetic pathways also display a high degree of similarity. Actinomycete aminoglycoside phosphotransferase antibiotic resistance enzymes (APH) are coded for by such genes and are therefore good targets for evaluating the bioactive potential of actinomycetes. A set of universal PCR primers for APH encoding genes was used to probe genomic DNA from three collections of actinomycetes to determine the utility of molecular screening. An additional monitoring of populations for the predominance of specific classes of enzymes to predict the potential of environmental sites for providing isolates with interesting metabolic profiles. Approximately one-fifth of all isolates screened gave a positive result by PCR. The PCR products obtained were sequenced and compared to existing APH family members. Sequence analysis resolved the family into nine groups of which six had recognizable phenotypes: 6'-phosphotransferase (APH(6)), 3'-phosphotransferase (APH(3)), hydroxyurea phosphotransferase (HUR), peptide phosphotransferase, hygromycin B phosphotransferase (APH(7)) and oxidoreductase. The actinomycetes screened fell into seven groups, including three novel groups with unknown phenotypes. The strains clustered according to the environmental site from where they were obtained, providing evidence for the movement of these genes within populations. The value of this as a method for obtaining novel compounds and the significance to the ecology of antibiotic biosynthesis are discussed.

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