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1.
Metabolites ; 11(10)2021 Oct 11.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34677408

RESUMO

Microbial natural products are a major source of bioactive compounds for drug discovery. Among these molecules, nonribosomal peptides (NRPs) represent a diverse class of natural products that include antibiotics, immunosuppressants, and anticancer agents. Recent breakthroughs in natural product discovery have revealed the chemical structure of several thousand NRPs. However, biosynthetic gene clusters (BGCs) encoding them are known only for a few hundred compounds. Here, we developed Nerpa, a computational method for the high-throughput discovery of novel BGCs responsible for producing known NRPs. After searching 13,399 representative bacterial genomes from the RefSeq repository against 8368 known NRPs, Nerpa linked 117 BGCs to their products. We further experimentally validated the predicted BGC of ngercheumicin from Photobacterium galatheae via mass spectrometry. Nerpa supports searching new genomes against thousands of known NRP structures, and novel molecular structures against tens of thousands of bacterial genomes. The availability of these tools can enhance our understanding of NRP synthesis and the function of their biosynthetic enzymes.

2.
Nat Biotechnol ; 39(2): 169-173, 2021 02.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33169034

RESUMO

We engineered a machine learning approach, MSHub, to enable auto-deconvolution of gas chromatography-mass spectrometry (GC-MS) data. We then designed workflows to enable the community to store, process, share, annotate, compare and perform molecular networking of GC-MS data within the Global Natural Product Social (GNPS) Molecular Networking analysis platform. MSHub/GNPS performs auto-deconvolution of compound fragmentation patterns via unsupervised non-negative matrix factorization and quantifies the reproducibility of fragmentation patterns across samples.


Assuntos
Algoritmos , Cromatografia Gasosa-Espectrometria de Massas , Metabolômica , Animais , Anuros , Humanos
3.
J Am Chem Soc ; 142(9): 4114-4120, 2020 03 04.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32045230

RESUMO

This report describes the first application of the novel NMR-based machine learning tool "Small Molecule Accurate Recognition Technology" (SMART 2.0) for mixture analysis and subsequent accelerated discovery and characterization of new natural products. The concept was applied to the extract of a filamentous marine cyanobacterium known to be a prolific producer of cytotoxic natural products. This environmental Symploca extract was roughly fractionated, and then prioritized and guided by cancer cell cytotoxicity, NMR-based SMART 2.0, and MS2-based molecular networking. This led to the isolation and rapid identification of a new chimeric swinholide-like macrolide, symplocolide A, as well as the annotation of swinholide A, samholides A-I, and several new derivatives. The planar structure of symplocolide A was confirmed to be a structural hybrid between swinholide A and luminaolide B by 1D/2D NMR and LC-MS2 analysis. A second example applies SMART 2.0 to the characterization of structurally novel cyclic peptides, and compares this approach to the recently appearing "atomic sort" method. This study exemplifies the revolutionary potential of combined traditional and deep learning-assisted analytical approaches to overcome longstanding challenges in natural products drug discovery.


Assuntos
Produtos Biológicos/química , Aprendizado de Máquina , Redes Neurais de Computação , Produtos Biológicos/isolamento & purificação , Produtos Biológicos/toxicidade , Linhagem Celular Tumoral , Quimioinformática , Cianobactérias/química , Humanos , Espectroscopia de Ressonância Magnética , Peptídeos Cíclicos/química , Peptídeos Cíclicos/isolamento & purificação , Peptídeos Cíclicos/toxicidade
4.
Nat Methods ; 16(12): 1306-1314, 2019 12.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31686038

RESUMO

Integrating multiomics datasets is critical for microbiome research; however, inferring interactions across omics datasets has multiple statistical challenges. We solve this problem by using neural networks (https://github.com/biocore/mmvec) to estimate the conditional probability that each molecule is present given the presence of a specific microorganism. We show with known environmental (desert soil biocrust wetting) and clinical (cystic fibrosis lung) examples, our ability to recover microbe-metabolite relationships, and demonstrate how the method can discover relationships between microbially produced metabolites and inflammatory bowel disease.


Assuntos
Bactérias/metabolismo , Microbiota , Animais , Benchmarking , Cianobactérias/metabolismo , Fibrose Cística/microbiologia , Doenças Inflamatórias Intestinais/microbiologia , Camundongos , Redes Neurais de Computação , Pseudomonas aeruginosa/metabolismo
5.
Cell Syst ; 9(6): 600-608.e4, 2019 12 18.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31629686

RESUMO

Ribosomally synthesized and post-translationally modified peptides (RiPPs) are an important class of natural products that contain antibiotics and a variety of other bioactive compounds. The existing methods for discovery of RiPPs by combining genome mining and computational mass spectrometry are limited to discovering specific classes of RiPPs from small datasets, and these methods fail to handle unknown post-translational modifications. Here, we present MetaMiner, a software tool for addressing these challenges that is compatible with large-scale screening platforms for natural product discovery. After searching millions of spectra in the Global Natural Products Social (GNPS) molecular networking infrastructure against just eight genomic and metagenomic datasets, MetaMiner discovered 31 known and seven unknown RiPPs from diverse microbial communities, including human microbiome and lichen microbiome, and microorganisms isolated from the International Space Station.


Assuntos
Biologia Computacional/métodos , Microbiota/genética , Processamento de Proteína Pós-Traducional/genética , Genômica/métodos , Humanos , Peptídeos/química , Ribossomos/genética , Software
6.
Sci Adv ; 4(9): eaau1908, 2018 09.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30263961

RESUMO

Environmental microbial communities are stratified by chemical gradients that shape the structure and function of these systems. Similar chemical gradients exist in the human body, but how they influence these microbial systems is more poorly understood. Understanding these effects can be particularly important for dysbiotic shifts in microbiome structure that are often associated with disease. We show that pH and oxygen strongly partition the microbial community from a diseased human lung into two mutually exclusive communities of pathogens and anaerobes. Antimicrobial treatment disrupted this chemical partitioning, causing complex death, survival, and resistance outcomes that were highly dependent on the individual microorganism and on community stratification. These effects were mathematically modeled, enabling a predictive understanding of this complex polymicrobial system. Harnessing the power of these chemical gradients could be a drug-free method of shaping microbial communities in the human body from undesirable dysbiotic states.


Assuntos
Infecções Bacterianas/microbiologia , Quimiotaxia/fisiologia , Fibrose Cística/microbiologia , Pulmão/microbiologia , Microbiota/fisiologia , Adulto , Antibacterianos/metabolismo , Infecções Bacterianas/metabolismo , Infecções Bacterianas/patologia , Quimiotaxia/efeitos dos fármacos , Fibrose Cística/metabolismo , Fibrose Cística/patologia , Sequenciamento de Nucleotídeos em Larga Escala , Humanos , Pulmão/metabolismo , Pulmão/patologia , Redes e Vias Metabólicas , Modelos Teóricos , Escarro/metabolismo , Escarro/microbiologia , Transcriptoma , Fatores de Virulência/metabolismo
7.
Proc Biol Sci ; 285(1884)2018 08 15.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30111600

RESUMO

Corals and humans represent two extremely disparate metazoan lineages and are therefore useful for comparative evolutionary studies. Two lipid-based molecules that are central to human immunity, platelet-activating factor (PAF) and Lyso-PAF were recently identified in scleractinian corals. To identify processes in corals that involve these molecules, PAF and Lyso-PAF biosynthesis was quantified in conditions known to stimulate PAF production in mammals (tissue growth and exposure to elevated levels of ultraviolet light) and in conditions unique to corals (competing with neighbouring colonies over benthic space). Similar to observations in mammals, PAF production was higher in regions of active tissue growth and increased when corals were exposed to elevated levels of ultraviolet light. PAF production also increased when corals were attacked by the stinging cells of a neighbouring colony, though only the attacked coral exhibited an increase in PAF. This reaction was observed in adjacent areas of the colony, indicating that this response is coordinated across multiple polyps including those not directly subject to the stress. PAF and Lyso-PAF are involved in coral stress responses that are both shared with mammals and unique to the ecology of cnidarians.


Assuntos
Agressão , Antozoários/metabolismo , Fator de Ativação de Plaquetas/biossíntese , Raios Ultravioleta , Animais , Antozoários/crescimento & desenvolvimento , Antozoários/efeitos da radiação , Fosfolipases A2/metabolismo , Fator de Ativação de Plaquetas/análogos & derivados , Fator de Ativação de Plaquetas/metabolismo , Estresse Fisiológico
8.
Nat Chem Biol ; 13(1): 30-37, 2017 Jan.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27820803

RESUMO

Peptidic natural products (PNPs) are widely used compounds that include many antibiotics and a variety of other bioactive peptides. Although recent breakthroughs in PNP discovery raised the challenge of developing new algorithms for their analysis, identification of PNPs via database search of tandem mass spectra remains an open problem. To address this problem, natural product researchers use dereplication strategies that identify known PNPs and lead to the discovery of new ones, even in cases when the reference spectra are not present in existing spectral libraries. DEREPLICATOR is a new dereplication algorithm that enables high-throughput PNP identification and that is compatible with large-scale mass-spectrometry-based screening platforms for natural product discovery. After searching nearly one hundred million tandem mass spectra in the Global Natural Products Social (GNPS) molecular networking infrastructure, DEREPLICATOR identified an order of magnitude more PNPs (and their new variants) than any previous dereplication efforts.


Assuntos
Algoritmos , Produtos Biológicos/análise , Bases de Dados de Compostos Químicos , Descoberta de Drogas/métodos , Peptídeos/análise , Espectrometria de Massas em Tandem
9.
J Nat Prod ; 79(11): 2873-2882, 2016 11 23.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27786472

RESUMO

An efficient process was used to isolate six new jatrophane esters, euphodendroidins J (3), K (5), L (6), M, (8), N (10), and O (11), along with seven known diterpenoid esters, namely, euphodendroidins A (4), B (9), E (1), and F (2), jatrophane ester (7), and 3α-hydroxyterracinolides G and B (12 and 13), and terracinolides J and C (14 and 15) from the latex of Euphorbia dendroides. Their 2D structures and relative configurations were established by extensive NMR spectroscopic analysis. The absolute configurations of compounds 1, 11, and 15 were determined by X-ray diffraction analysis. Euphodendroidin F (2) was obtained in 18% yield from the diterpenoid ester-enriched extract after two consecutive flash chromatography steps, making it an interesting starting material for chemical synthesis. Euphodendroidins K and L (5 and 6) showed an unprecedented NMR spectroscopic behavior, which was investigated by variable-temperature NMR experiments and molecular modeling. The structure-conformation relationships study of compounds 1, 5, and 6, using DFT-NMR calculations, indicated the prominent role of the acylation pattern in governing the conformational behavior of these jatrophane esters. The antiviral activity of compounds 1-15 was evaluated against Chikungunya virus (CHIKV) replication.


Assuntos
Vírus Chikungunya/efeitos dos fármacos , Diterpenos , Euphorbia/química , Látex/química , Antineoplásicos Fitogênicos/química , Antivirais/química , Antivirais/isolamento & purificação , Antivirais/farmacologia , Febre de Chikungunya/tratamento farmacológico , Cristalografia por Raios X , Diterpenos/química , Diterpenos/isolamento & purificação , Diterpenos/farmacologia , Ésteres , França , Modelos Moleculares , Conformação Molecular , Estrutura Molecular , Ressonância Magnética Nuclear Biomolecular , Relação Estrutura-Atividade , Replicação Viral/efeitos dos fármacos
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