(Press-News.org) Contact information: Joern Piel
jpiel@ethz.ch
41-446-330-755
ETH Zurich
Sponge bacteria, a chemical factory
Talented producers from stony sponge
Sponges are unique beings: they are invertebrates that live in symbiosis with sometimes hundreds of different types of bacteria; similar to lichens which are a biocoenosis of algae and fungi. "Put simply, many sponges are lumps of bacteria in which some sponge cells are found," says Jörn Piel, Professor of Microbiology at the ETH Zurich.
Many sponges have it in them: the bacteria they contain produce many, partly toxic natural products that may be interesting candidates for medical use. The stony sponge Theonella swinhoei is a particularly rich and well-investigated source of such natural products. There are various chemotypes of this sponge, i.e. organisms of the same kind that contain various metabolic products. From the yellow variant, Theonella swinhoei Y, which is found in waters surrounding Hachijo Island on Japan's east coast, more than 40 different bioactive substances have been isolated to date – most of these being polyketides or peptides. Until now, however, it was not known which of the sponge's bacteria produced these substances.
A team of researchers from several higher education institutions in Germany, Japan, USA and Switzerland led by Jörn Piel has now been able to track down the initiator: a bacterium from the candidate genus Entotheonella is the producer of these substances. In a study that has just been published in Nature, the scientists also describe Entotheonella bacteria as representative of a new, subordinate systematic unit (phylum) within the bacteria kingdom that have been named "Tectomicrobia".
Centrifugalising sponge
In order to find the substance producers, the researchers had to separate the sponge collected in the sea into its individual parts and examine the individual cells. After they had centrifuged the sponge components, the researchers noticed a threadlike bacterium under the microscope, which – after they examined it with a UV light – fluoresced. A closer inspection revealed two closely related Entotheonella bacteria that colonized the sponge. The association of the bioactive substances to the genome of both bacteria was ultimately indicative that only one of the two microorganisms manufactures the natural products obtained from the sponge.
Entotheonella bacteria – with their chemically diverse metabolism – are so-called "talented producers". These include only a few groups of microorganisms, such as actinomycetes or Bacillus, that are able to produce metabolic products of medical interest. Until now, almost all of these substances could only be obtained from cultivated strains. Entotheonella are the first talented producers that belong to bacteria unable to be cultivated to date. The latter make up by far the largest proportion of all bacteria and have hardly been researched thus far. Current research is aiming to bring the substance producers from sponges to pure culture with the findings obtained from this study.
Cultivating bacteria instead of collecting sponge
Isolating the interesting substances from sponges would indeed be possible but not sustainable, because large amounts of sponge are needed for greater substance quantities. The substances should therefore be produced in a lab, either by cultivating corresponding strains of bacteria or by synthesis in a test tube. In several countries, a cancer treatment based on a sponge agent is already on the market. "But in order to synthetically produce the agent, more than 60 work steps are required," says Piel, stressing the complexity of the endeavour.
The ETH professor sees another possibility in transferring the genes that code the agent production to an organism that is easy to cultivate and then producing the desired substance (or a precursor) in sufficient quantities. However, there is still a long way to go to reach this stage.
###
Reference
Wilson MC et al. An environmental bacterial taxon with a large and distinct metabolic repertoire. Nature, published online 29th January 2014. DOI: 10.1038/nature12959
Sponge bacteria, a chemical factory
Talented producers from stony sponge
2014-01-30
ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:
Improved ultrasound imaging provides alternate way to visualize tumors
2014-01-30
CHAPEL HILL, NC – While ultrasound ...
Neanderthal lineages excavated from modern human genomes
2014-01-30
A substantial fraction of the Neanderthal genome persists in modern human populations. A new approach applied to analyzing whole-genome ...
More heart attack patients being treated more quickly using PCI , national audit finds
2014-01-30
Expansion in the use of Percutaneous Coronary Intervention (PCI) – the minimally ...
'Rogue' asteroids may be the norm
2014-01-30
CAMBRIDGE, MA -- To get an idea of how the early solar system may have formed, scientists often look to asteroids. These relics of rock and dust represent what today's planets may have been before they differentiated ...
When populations collide
2014-01-30
More than thirty thousand years ago, Homo sapiens migrating out of Africa began encountering Neanderthals, a lineage that had diverged from modern humans hundreds of thousands ...
TRMM satellite peers at rainfall in developing low near Mozambique
2014-01-30
PUBLIC RELEASE DATE: 29-Jan-2014
[
| E-mail
]
var addthis_pub="eurekalert"; var addthis_options = "favorites, delicious, digg, facebook, twitter, google, newsvine, reddit, slashdot, stumbleupon, buzz, more"
Share
Contact: Rob Gutro
robert.j.gutro@nasa.gov
NASA/Goddard Space Flight Center
TRMM satellite peers at rainfall in developing low near Mozambique
VIDEO:
The TRMM satellite flew above a tropical low (91S) in the Mozambique Channel on Jan. 28, 2014, ...
NASA-NOAA satellite sees Tropical Cyclone 11P headed for Queensland
2014-01-30
The NASA-NOAA Satellite known as Suomi NPP flew over newborn Tropical Cyclone 11P in the Coral Sea and captured a visible image of the newly developed storm as it moves toward a landfall in Queensland, ...
UA researchers trace bat killer's path
2014-01-30
As North American bats face a death toll approaching 7 million, University of Akron scientists reveal new clues about their killer, White Nose Syndrome, ...
Obesity-induced fatty liver disease reversed in mice
2014-01-30
Johns Hopkins researchers have discovered that valproic acid, a widely prescribed drug for treating epilepsy, has the additional benefits of reducing ...
China's reliance on lower-paid contract nurses may compromise patient care
2014-01-30
(NEW YORK, NY, January 29, 2014) – Economic and health system reforms in China in recent decades ...
LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:
Patient care technology disruptions associated with the CrowdStrike outage
New jab protects babies from serious lung infection, study shows
July Tip Sheet from Sylvester Comprehensive Cancer Center
Current application status and innovative development of surgical robot
Counterfeited in China: New book assesses state of industry and its future
Machine learning reveals historical seismic events in the Yellowstone caldera
First analyses of Myanmar earthquake conclude fault ruptured at supershear velocity
Curved fault slip captured on CCTV during Myanmar earthquake
Collaboration rewarded for work to further deployment of batteries in emerging economies
Heart-healthy habits also prevent cancer, Alzheimer’s, COPD, other diseases, Emory study finds
Scientists will use a $1M grant to build a support system addressing sea level rise and flooding in South Florida
New research examines how pH impacts the immune system
Inhaled agricultural dust disrupts gut health
New study reveals hidden regulatory roles of “junk” DNA
Taking the sting out of ulcerative colitis
Deep life’s survival secret: Crustal faulting generates key energy sources, study shows
Idaho National Laboratory to lead advancements in US semiconductor manufacturing
AI-assisted sorting, other new technologies could improve plastic recycling
More than just larks and owls!
Call for nominations: 2026 Dan David Prize
New tool gives anyone the ability to train a robot
Coexistence of APC and KRAS mutations in familial adenomatous polyposis and endometrial cancer: A mini-review with case-based perspective
First global-to-local study reveals stark health inequalities from COVID-19 in 2020–2021
rcssci: Simplifying complex data relationships with enhanced visual clarity
Why some ecosystems collapse suddenly—and others don’t
One-third of U.S. public schools screen students for mental health issues
GLP-1 RA use and survival among older adults with cancer and type 2 diabetes
Trends in physician exit from fee-for-service Medicare
Systematic investigation of tumor microenvironment and antitumor immunity with IOBR
Common feature between forest fires and neural networks reveals the universal framework underneath
[Press-News.org] Sponge bacteria, a chemical factoryTalented producers from stony sponge