RESUMO
Natural products encompass a diverse range of compounds with high impact applications in consumer care, agriculture and most notably, therapeutics. However, despite the expansive chemical repertoire indicated in genomic information of microbes, only a small subset can be obtained under laboratory conditions. To increase accessible chemical space and realize Nature's full chemical potential, a multi-pronged genetic- and cultivation-based strategy has been employed to activate and upregulate natural product biosyntheses in native and heterologous strains. This data descriptor documents a characterized collection of 2,138 liquid chromatography-tandem mass spectrometry (LC/MS-MS) spectra of fermentation extracts from 54 native actinobacterial strains collected from soil and marine environments in Singapore, and their 459 activated mutants in 3 to 5 media. A total of 743 unique metabolites have been identified, with the activated mutants demonstrating an approximately 2-fold expansion in accessible chemical space over wild type strains. Interrogating this expanded chemical diversity with cheminformatic tools can provide direction for the discovery of novel natural products with desirable functional activity.
Assuntos
Actinobacteria , Mutação , Espectrometria de Massas em Tandem , Actinobacteria/genética , Actinobacteria/metabolismo , Cromatografia Líquida , Produtos Biológicos/metabolismo , Produtos Biológicos/química , Singapura , Microbiologia do SoloRESUMO
Natural products possess significant therapeutic potential but remain underutilized despite advances in genomics and bioinformatics. While there are approaches to activate and upregulate natural product biosynthesis in both native and heterologous microbial strains, a comprehensive strategy to elicit production of natural products as well as a generalizable and efficient method to interrogate diverse native strains collection, remains lacking. Here, we explore a flexible and robust integrase-mediated multi-pronged activation approach to reliably perturb and globally trigger antibiotics production in actinobacteria. Across 54 actinobacterial strains, our approach yielded 124 distinct activator-strain combinations which consistently outperform wild type. Our approach expands accessible metabolite space by nearly two-fold and increases selected metabolite yields by up to >200-fold, enabling discovery of Gram-negative bioactivity in tetramic acid analogs. We envision these findings as a gateway towards a more streamlined, accelerated, and scalable strategy to unlock the full potential of Nature's chemical repertoire.