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1.
Cell ; 186(16): 3400-3413.e20, 2023 08 03.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37541197

RESUMO

Approximately 15% of US adults have circulating levels of uric acid above its solubility limit, which is causally linked to the disease gout. In most mammals, uric acid elimination is facilitated by the enzyme uricase. However, human uricase is a pseudogene, having been inactivated early in hominid evolution. Though it has long been known that uric acid is eliminated in the gut, the role of the gut microbiota in hyperuricemia has not been studied. Here, we identify a widely distributed bacterial gene cluster that encodes a pathway for uric acid degradation. Stable isotope tracing demonstrates that gut bacteria metabolize uric acid to xanthine or short chain fatty acids. Ablation of the microbiota in uricase-deficient mice causes severe hyperuricemia, and anaerobe-targeted antibiotics increase the risk of gout in humans. These data reveal a role for the gut microbiota in uric acid excretion and highlight the potential for microbiome-targeted therapeutics in hyperuricemia.


Assuntos
Gota , Hominidae , Hiperuricemia , Adulto , Animais , Humanos , Camundongos , Gota/genética , Gota/metabolismo , Hominidae/genética , Hiperuricemia/genética , Mamíferos/metabolismo , Urato Oxidase/genética , Ácido Úrico/metabolismo , Evolução Molecular
2.
Cell ; 185(9): 1449-1451, 2022 04 28.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35487188

RESUMO

Microbial specialized metabolites play key roles in microbiome interactions, but their biosynthetic pathways are difficult to characterize. In this issue, Patel et al. (2022) describe new technologies for the computer-aided redesign of gene clusters to facilitate heterologous expression across diverse hosts and showcase their utility by identifying a new class of microbiome-derived nucleotide metabolites.


Assuntos
Vias Biossintéticas , Interações entre Hospedeiro e Microrganismos , Microbiota
4.
Cell ; 158(2): 412-421, 2014 Jul 17.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25036635

RESUMO

Although biosynthetic gene clusters (BGCs) have been discovered for hundreds of bacterial metabolites, our knowledge of their diversity remains limited. Here, we used a novel algorithm to systematically identify BGCs in the extensive extant microbial sequencing data. Network analysis of the predicted BGCs revealed large gene cluster families, the vast majority uncharacterized. We experimentally characterized the most prominent family, consisting of two subfamilies of hundreds of BGCs distributed throughout the Proteobacteria; their products are aryl polyenes, lipids with an aryl head group conjugated to a polyene tail. We identified a distant relationship to a third subfamily of aryl polyene BGCs, and together the three subfamilies represent the largest known family of biosynthetic gene clusters, with more than 1,000 members. Although these clusters are widely divergent in sequence, their small molecule products are remarkably conserved, indicating for the first time the important roles these compounds play in Gram-negative cell biology.


Assuntos
Algoritmos , Bactérias/genética , Bactérias/metabolismo , Bactérias/química , Bactérias/classificação , Mutação , Estresse Oxidativo , Filogenia , Metabolismo Secundário
5.
Nat Rev Genet ; 22(9): 553-571, 2021 09.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34083778

RESUMO

All organisms produce specialized organic molecules, ranging from small volatile chemicals to large gene-encoded peptides, that have evolved to provide them with diverse cellular and ecological functions. As natural products, they are broadly applied in medicine, agriculture and nutrition. The rapid accumulation of genomic information has revealed that the metabolic capacity of virtually all organisms is vastly underappreciated. Pioneered mainly in bacteria and fungi, genome mining technologies are accelerating metabolite discovery. Recent efforts are now being expanded to all life forms, including protists, plants and animals, and new integrative omics technologies are enabling the increasingly effective mining of this molecular diversity.


Assuntos
Bactérias/genética , Produtos Biológicos/química , Descoberta de Drogas/métodos , Fungos/genética , Genoma , Genômica/métodos , Plantas/genética , Animais , Produtos Biológicos/metabolismo , Produtos Biológicos/uso terapêutico , Biologia Computacional/métodos , Humanos
6.
Trends Genet ; 39(4): 237-239, 2023 04.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36822964

RESUMO

Convergent evolution has been described for several metabolic pathways across the kingdoms of life. However, there is hitherto no evidence for such an interkingdom process for antimicrobials. A new report suggests that marine animals have evolved the ability to biosynthesize antimicrobial polyketides, in parallel with bacteria.


Assuntos
Antibacterianos , Bactérias , Animais , Bactérias/genética
7.
Nucleic Acids Res ; 52(D1): D586-D589, 2024 Jan 05.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37904617

RESUMO

Many microorganisms produce natural products that are frequently used in the development of medicines and crop protection agents. Genome mining has evolved into a prominent method to access this potential. antiSMASH is the most popular tool for this task. Here we present version 4 of the antiSMASH database, providing biosynthetic gene clusters detected by antiSMASH 7.1 in publicly available, dereplicated, high-quality microbial genomes via an interactive graphical user interface. In version 4, the database contains 231 534 high quality BGC regions from 592 archaeal, 35 726 bacterial and 236 fungal genomes and is available at https://antismash-db.secondarymetabolites.org/.


Assuntos
Produtos Biológicos , Vias Biossintéticas , Bases de Dados Genéticas , Genoma Microbiano , Vias Biossintéticas/genética , Família Multigênica , Software
8.
Nucleic Acids Res ; 51(W1): W46-W50, 2023 07 05.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37140036

RESUMO

Microorganisms produce small bioactive compounds as part of their secondary or specialised metabolism. Often, such metabolites have antimicrobial, anticancer, antifungal, antiviral or other bio-activities and thus play an important role for applications in medicine and agriculture. In the past decade, genome mining has become a widely-used method to explore, access, and analyse the available biodiversity of these compounds. Since 2011, the 'antibiotics and secondary metabolite analysis shell-antiSMASH' (https://antismash.secondarymetabolites.org/) has supported researchers in their microbial genome mining tasks, both as a free to use web server and as a standalone tool under an OSI-approved open source licence. It is currently the most widely used tool for detecting and characterising biosynthetic gene clusters (BGCs) in archaea, bacteria, and fungi. Here, we present the updated version 7 of antiSMASH. antiSMASH 7 increases the number of supported cluster types from 71 to 81, as well as containing improvements in the areas of chemical structure prediction, enzymatic assembly-line visualisation and gene cluster regulation.


Assuntos
Computadores , Software , Bactérias/genética , Bactérias/metabolismo , Archaea/genética , Genoma Microbiano , Família Multigênica , Metabolismo Secundário/genética
9.
Environ Microbiol ; 26(2): e16589, 2024 Feb.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38356049

RESUMO

Ancient environmental samples, including permafrost soils and frozen animal remains, represent an archive with microbial communities that have barely been explored. This yet unexplored microbial world is a genetic resource that may provide us with new evolutionary insights into recent genomic changes, as well as novel metabolic pathways and chemistry. Here, we describe Actinomycetota Micromonospora, Oerskovia, Saccharopolyspora, Sanguibacter and Streptomyces species were successfully revived and their genome sequences resolved. Surprisingly, the genomes of these bacteria from an ancient source show a large phylogenetic distance to known strains and harbour many novel biosynthetic gene clusters that may well represent uncharacterised biosynthetic potential. Metabolic profiles of the strains display the production of known molecules like antimycin, conglobatin and macrotetrolides, but the majority of the mass features could not be dereplicated. Our work provides insights into Actinomycetota isolated from an ancient source, yielding unexplored genomic information that is not yet present in current databases.


Assuntos
Actinomycetales , Mamutes , Streptomyces , Animais , Filogenia , Genômica , Streptomyces/genética , Fezes
10.
Nat Chem Biol ; 18(3): 295-304, 2022 03.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34969972

RESUMO

Major advances in genome sequencing and large-scale biosynthetic gene cluster (BGC) analysis have prompted an age of natural product discovery driven by genome mining. Still, connecting molecules to their cognate BGCs is a substantial bottleneck for this approach. We have developed a mass-spectrometry-based parallel stable isotope labeling platform, termed IsoAnalyst, which assists in associating metabolite stable isotope labeling patterns with BGC structure prediction to connect natural products to their corresponding BGCs. Here we show that IsoAnalyst can quickly associate both known metabolites and unknown analytes with BGCs to elucidate the complex chemical phenotypes of these biosynthetic systems. We validate this approach for a range of compound classes, using both the type strain Saccharopolyspora erythraea and an environmentally isolated Micromonospora sp. We further demonstrate the utility of this tool with the discovery of lobosamide D, a new and structurally unique member of the family of lobosamide macrolactams.


Assuntos
Produtos Biológicos , Micromonospora , Vias Biossintéticas/genética , Marcação por Isótopo , Família Multigênica
11.
Nat Chem Biol ; 18(1): 18-28, 2022 01.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34811516

RESUMO

Many bioactive plant cyclic peptides form side-chain-derived macrocycles. Lyciumins, cyclic plant peptides with tryptophan macrocyclizations, are ribosomal peptides (RiPPs) originating from repetitive core peptide motifs in precursor peptides with plant-specific BURP (BNM2, USP, RD22 and PG1beta) domains, but the biosynthetic mechanism for their formation has remained unknown. Here, we characterize precursor-peptide BURP domains as copper-dependent autocatalytic peptide cyclases and use a combination of tandem mass spectrometry-based metabolomics and plant genomics to systematically discover five BURP-domain-derived plant RiPP classes, with mono- and bicyclic structures formed via tryptophans and tyrosines, from botanical collections. As BURP-domain cyclases are scaffold-generating enzymes in plant specialized metabolism that are physically connected to their substrates in the same polypeptide, we introduce a bioinformatic method to mine plant genomes for precursor-peptide-encoding genes by detection of repetitive substrate domains and known core peptide features. Our study sets the stage for chemical, biosynthetic and biological exploration of plant RiPP natural products from BURP-domain cyclases.


Assuntos
Peptídeos Cíclicos/biossíntese , Peptídeos Cíclicos/química , Proteínas de Plantas/química , Sequência de Aminoácidos , Catálise , Permeabilidade da Membrana Celular , Ciclização , Genoma de Planta , Espectrometria de Massas em Tandem
12.
PLoS Comput Biol ; 19(2): e1010462, 2023 02.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36758069

RESUMO

Microbial specialised metabolism is full of valuable natural products that are applied clinically, agriculturally, and industrially. The genes that encode their biosynthesis are often physically clustered on the genome in biosynthetic gene clusters (BGCs). Many BGCs consist of multiple groups of co-evolving genes called sub-clusters that are responsible for the biosynthesis of a specific chemical moiety in a natural product. Sub-clusters therefore provide an important link between the structures of a natural product and its BGC, which can be leveraged for predicting natural product structures from sequence, as well as for linking chemical structures and metabolomics-derived mass features to BGCs. While some initial computational methodologies have been devised for sub-cluster detection, current approaches are not scalable, have only been run on small and outdated datasets, or produce an impractically large number of possible sub-clusters to mine through. Here, we constructed a scalable method for unsupervised sub-cluster detection, called iPRESTO, based on topic modelling and statistical analysis of co-occurrence patterns of enzyme-coding protein families. iPRESTO was used to mine sub-clusters across 150,000 prokaryotic BGCs from antiSMASH-DB. After annotating a fraction of the resulting sub-cluster families, we could predict a substructure for 16% of the antiSMASH-DB BGCs. Additionally, our method was able to confirm 83% of the experimentally characterised sub-clusters in MIBiG reference BGCs. Based on iPRESTO-detected sub-clusters, we could correctly identify the BGCs for xenorhabdin and salbostatin biosynthesis (which had not yet been annotated in BGC databases), as well as propose a candidate BGC for akashin biosynthesis. Additionally, we show for a collection of 145 actinobacteria how substructures can aid in linking BGCs to molecules by correlating iPRESTO-detected sub-clusters to MS/MS-derived Mass2Motifs substructure patterns. This work paves the way for deeper functional and structural annotation of microbial BGCs by improved linking of orphan molecules to their cognate gene clusters, thus facilitating accelerated natural product discovery.


Assuntos
Produtos Biológicos , Espectrometria de Massas em Tandem , Metabolômica , Bactérias/genética , Família Multigênica
13.
Nature ; 560(7717): 233-237, 2018 08.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30069051

RESUMO

Soils harbour some of the most diverse microbiomes on Earth and are essential for both nutrient cycling and carbon storage. To understand soil functioning, it is necessary to model the global distribution patterns and functional gene repertoires of soil microorganisms, as well as the biotic and environmental associations between the diversity and structure of both bacterial and fungal soil communities1-4. Here we show, by leveraging metagenomics and metabarcoding of global topsoil samples (189 sites, 7,560 subsamples), that bacterial, but not fungal, genetic diversity is highest in temperate habitats and that microbial gene composition varies more strongly with environmental variables than with geographic distance. We demonstrate that fungi and bacteria show global niche differentiation that is associated with contrasting diversity responses to precipitation and soil pH. Furthermore, we provide evidence for strong bacterial-fungal antagonism, inferred from antibiotic-resistance genes, in topsoil and ocean habitats, indicating the substantial role of biotic interactions in shaping microbial communities. Our results suggest that both competition and environmental filtering affect the abundance, composition and encoded gene functions of bacterial and fungal communities, indicating that the relative contributions of these microorganisms to global nutrient cycling varies spatially.


Assuntos
Bactérias/isolamento & purificação , Biodiversidade , Planeta Terra , Fungos/isolamento & purificação , Microbiota/fisiologia , Microbiologia do Solo , Bactérias/genética , Código de Barras de DNA Taxonômico , Resistência Microbiana a Medicamentos/genética , Fungos/genética , Concentração de Íons de Hidrogênio , Metagenômica , Microbiota/genética , Oceanos e Mares , Chuva , Água do Mar/microbiologia
14.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38569653

RESUMO

Microbes typically live in complex habitats where they need to rapidly adapt to continuously changing growth conditions. To do so, they produce an astonishing array of natural products with diverse structures and functions. Actinobacteria stand out for their prolific production of bioactive molecules, including antibiotics, anticancer agents, antifungals, and immunosuppressants. Attention has been directed especially towards the identification of the compounds they produce and the mining of the large diversity of biosynthetic gene clusters (BGCs) in their genomes. However, the current return on investment in random screening for bioactive compounds is low, while it is hard to predict which of the millions of BGCs should be prioritized. Moreover, many of the BGCs for yet undiscovered natural products are silent or cryptic under laboratory growth conditions. To identify ways to prioritize and activate these BGCs, knowledge regarding the way their expression is controlled is crucial. Intricate regulatory networks control global gene expression in Actinobacteria, governed by a staggering number of up to 1000 transcription factors per strain. This review highlights recent advances in experimental and computational methods for characterizing and predicting transcription factor binding sites and their applications to guide natural product discovery. We propose that regulation-guided genome mining approaches will open new avenues toward eliciting the expression of BGCs, as well as prioritizing subsets of BGCs for expression using synthetic biology approaches. ONE-SENTENCE SUMMARY: This review provides insights into advances in experimental and computational methods aimed at predicting transcription factor binding sites and their applications to guide natural product discovery.


Assuntos
Actinobacteria , Produtos Biológicos , Descoberta de Drogas , Redes Reguladoras de Genes , Actinobacteria/metabolismo , Actinobacteria/genética , Produtos Biológicos/metabolismo , Vias Biossintéticas , Biologia Computacional/métodos , Regulação Bacteriana da Expressão Gênica , Família Multigênica , Fatores de Transcrição/metabolismo , Fatores de Transcrição/genética
15.
BMC Bioinformatics ; 24(1): 181, 2023 May 03.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37131131

RESUMO

BACKGROUND: Co-localized sets of genes that encode specialized functions are common across microbial genomes and occur in genomes of larger eukaryotes as well. Important examples include Biosynthetic Gene Clusters (BGCs) that produce specialized metabolites with medicinal, agricultural, and industrial value (e.g. antimicrobials). Comparative analysis of BGCs can aid in the discovery of novel metabolites by highlighting distribution and identifying variants in public genomes. Unfortunately, gene-cluster-level homology detection remains inaccessible, time-consuming and difficult to interpret. RESULTS: The comparative gene cluster analysis toolbox (CAGECAT) is a rapid and user-friendly platform to mitigate difficulties in comparative analysis of whole gene clusters. The software provides homology searches and downstream analyses without the need for command-line or programming expertise. By leveraging remote BLAST databases, which always provide up-to-date results, CAGECAT can yield relevant matches that aid in the comparison, taxonomic distribution, or evolution of an unknown query. The service is extensible and interoperable and implements the cblaster and clinker pipelines to perform homology search, filtering, gene neighbourhood estimation, and dynamic visualisation of resulting variant BGCs. With the visualisation module, publication-quality figures can be customized directly from a web-browser, which greatly accelerates their interpretation via informative overlays to identify conserved genes in a BGC query. CONCLUSION: Overall, CAGECAT is an extensible software that can be interfaced via a standard web-browser for whole region homology searches and comparison on continually updated genomes from NCBI. The public web server and installable docker image are open source and freely available without registration at: https://cagecat.bioinformatics.nl .


Assuntos
Computadores , Software , Família Multigênica , Genoma , Análise por Conglomerados
16.
PLoS Biol ; 18(12): e3001026, 2020 12.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33351797

RESUMO

Microbial natural products constitute a wide variety of chemical compounds, many which can have antibiotic, antiviral, or anticancer properties that make them interesting for clinical purposes. Natural product classes include polyketides (PKs), nonribosomal peptides (NRPs), and ribosomally synthesized and post-translationally modified peptides (RiPPs). While variants of biosynthetic gene clusters (BGCs) for known classes of natural products are easy to identify in genome sequences, BGCs for new compound classes escape attention. In particular, evidence is accumulating that for RiPPs, subclasses known thus far may only represent the tip of an iceberg. Here, we present decRiPPter (Data-driven Exploratory Class-independent RiPP TrackER), a RiPP genome mining algorithm aimed at the discovery of novel RiPP classes. DecRiPPter combines a Support Vector Machine (SVM) that identifies candidate RiPP precursors with pan-genomic analyses to identify which of these are encoded within operon-like structures that are part of the accessory genome of a genus. Subsequently, it prioritizes such regions based on the presence of new enzymology and based on patterns of gene cluster and precursor peptide conservation across species. We then applied decRiPPter to mine 1,295 Streptomyces genomes, which led to the identification of 42 new candidate RiPP families that could not be found by existing programs. One of these was studied further and elucidated as a representative of a novel subfamily of lanthipeptides, which we designate class V. The 2D structure of the new RiPP, which we name pristinin A3 (1), was solved using nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR), tandem mass spectrometry (MS/MS) data, and chemical labeling. Two previously unidentified modifying enzymes are proposed to create the hallmark lanthionine bridges. Taken together, our work highlights how novel natural product families can be discovered by methods going beyond sequence similarity searches to integrate multiple pathway discovery criteria.


Assuntos
Bacteriocinas/genética , Genômica/métodos , Processamento de Proteína Pós-Traducional/genética , Algoritmos , Bacteriocinas/metabolismo , Produtos Biológicos/análise , Produtos Biológicos/metabolismo , Biologia Computacional/métodos , Genoma/genética , Aprendizado de Máquina , Família Multigênica/genética , Peptídeos/genética , Processamento de Proteína Pós-Traducional/fisiologia , Ribossomos/metabolismo
17.
Nucleic Acids Res ; 49(D1): D639-D643, 2021 01 08.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33152079

RESUMO

Microorganisms produce natural products that are frequently used in the development of antibacterial, antiviral, and anticancer drugs, pesticides, herbicides, or fungicides. In recent years, genome mining has evolved into a prominent method to access this potential. antiSMASH is one of the most popular tools for this task. Here, we present version 3 of the antiSMASH database, providing a means to access and query precomputed antiSMASH-5.2-detected biosynthetic gene clusters from representative, publicly available, high-quality microbial genomes via an interactive graphical user interface. In version 3, the database contains 147 517 high quality BGC regions from 388 archaeal, 25 236 bacterial and 177 fungal genomes and is available at https://antismash-db.secondarymetabolites.org/.


Assuntos
Mineração de Dados , Bases de Dados como Assunto , Enzimas/classificação , Vias Biossintéticas/genética , Família Multigênica , Ferramenta de Busca
18.
Nucleic Acids Res ; 49(D1): D490-D497, 2021 01 08.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33010170

RESUMO

Computational analysis of biosynthetic gene clusters (BGCs) has revolutionized natural product discovery by enabling the rapid investigation of secondary metabolic potential within microbial genome sequences. Grouping homologous BGCs into Gene Cluster Families (GCFs) facilitates mapping their architectural and taxonomic diversity and provides insights into the novelty of putative BGCs, through dereplication with BGCs of known function. While multiple databases exist for exploring BGCs from publicly available data, no public resources exist that focus on GCF relationships. Here, we present BiG-FAM, a database of 29,955 GCFs capturing the global diversity of 1,225,071 BGCs predicted from 209,206 publicly available microbial genomes and metagenome-assembled genomes (MAGs). The database offers rich functionalities, such as multi-criterion GCF searches, direct links to BGC databases such as antiSMASH-DB, and rapid GCF annotation of user-supplied BGCs from antiSMASH results. BiG-FAM can be accessed online at https://bigfam.bioinformatics.nl.


Assuntos
Vias Biossintéticas/genética , Bases de Dados Genéticas , Família Multigênica , Clostridium/genética , Ferramenta de Busca , Streptomyces/genética
19.
Nucleic Acids Res ; 49(W1): W263-W270, 2021 07 02.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34019648

RESUMO

Anaerobic bacteria from the human microbiome produce a wide array of molecules at high concentrations that can directly or indirectly affect the host. The production of these molecules, mostly derived from their primary metabolism, is frequently encoded in metabolic gene clusters (MGCs). However, despite the importance of microbiome-derived primary metabolites, no tool existed to predict the gene clusters responsible for their production. For this reason, we recently introduced gutSMASH. gutSMASH can predict 41 different known pathways, including MGCs involved in bioenergetics, but also putative ones that are candidates for novel pathway discovery. To make the tool more user-friendly and accessible, we here present the gutSMASH web server, hosted at https://gutsmash.bioinformatics.nl/. The user can either input the GenBank assembly accession or upload a genome file in FASTA or GenBank format. Optionally, the user can enable additional analyses to obtain further insights into the predicted MGCs. An interactive HTML output (viewable online or downloadable for offline use) provides a user-friendly way to browse functional gene annotations and sequence comparisons with reference gene clusters as well as gene clusters predicted in other genomes. Thus, this web server provides the community with a streamlined and user-friendly interface to analyze the metabolic potential of gut microbiomes.


Assuntos
Microbioma Gastrointestinal/genética , Genoma Bacteriano , Software , Bactérias/genética , Bactérias/metabolismo , Genômica , Internet
20.
Nucleic Acids Res ; 49(W1): W29-W35, 2021 07 02.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33978755

RESUMO

Many microorganisms produce natural products that form the basis of antimicrobials, antivirals, and other drugs. Genome mining is routinely used to complement screening-based workflows to discover novel natural products. Since 2011, the "antibiotics and secondary metabolite analysis shell-antiSMASH" (https://antismash.secondarymetabolites.org/) has supported researchers in their microbial genome mining tasks, both as a free-to-use web server and as a standalone tool under an OSI-approved open-source license. It is currently the most widely used tool for detecting and characterising biosynthetic gene clusters (BGCs) in bacteria and fungi. Here, we present the updated version 6 of antiSMASH. antiSMASH 6 increases the number of supported cluster types from 58 to 71, displays the modular structure of multi-modular BGCs, adds a new BGC comparison algorithm, allows for the integration of results from other prediction tools, and more effectively detects tailoring enzymes in RiPP clusters.


Assuntos
Produtos Biológicos/metabolismo , Genoma Microbiano , Software , Bactérias/genética , Vias Biossintéticas/genética , Fungos/genética , Metabolismo Secundário/genética
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