TY - JOUR
T1 - Biosynthetic potential-based strain prioritization for natural product discovery
T2 - A showcase for diterpenoid-producing actinomycetes
AU - Xie, Pengfei
AU - Ma, Ming
AU - Rateb, Mostafa E.
AU - Shaaban, Khaled A.
AU - Yu, Zhiguo
AU - Huang, Sheng Xiong
AU - Zhao, Li Xing
AU - Zhu, Xiangcheng
AU - Yan, Yijun
AU - Peterson, Ryan M.
AU - Lohman, Jeremy R.
AU - Yang, Dong
AU - Yin, Min
AU - Rudolf, Jeffrey D.
AU - Jiang, Yi
AU - Duan, Yanwen
AU - Shen, Ben
PY - 2014/2/28
Y1 - 2014/2/28
N2 - Natural products remain the best sources of drugs and drug leads and serve as outstanding small-molecule probes to dissect fundamental biological processes. A great challenge for the natural product community is to discover novel natural products efficiently and cost effectively. Here we report the development of a practical method to survey biosynthetic potential in microorganisms, thereby identifying the most promising strains and prioritizing them for natural product discovery. Central to our approach is the innovative preparation, by a two-tiered PCR method, of a pool of pathway-specific probes, thereby allowing the survey of all variants of the biosynthetic machineries for the targeted class of natural products. The utility of the method was demonstrated by surveying 100 strains, randomly selected from our actinomycete collection, for their biosynthetic potential of four classes of natural products, aromatic polyketides, reduced polyketides, nonribosomal peptides, and diterpenoids, identifying 16 talented strains. One of the talented strains, Streptomyces griseus CB00830, was finally chosen to showcase the discovery of the targeted classes of natural products, resulting in the isolation of three diterpenoids, six nonribosomal peptides and related metabolites, and three polyketides. Variations of this method should be applicable to the discovery of other classes of natural products.
AB - Natural products remain the best sources of drugs and drug leads and serve as outstanding small-molecule probes to dissect fundamental biological processes. A great challenge for the natural product community is to discover novel natural products efficiently and cost effectively. Here we report the development of a practical method to survey biosynthetic potential in microorganisms, thereby identifying the most promising strains and prioritizing them for natural product discovery. Central to our approach is the innovative preparation, by a two-tiered PCR method, of a pool of pathway-specific probes, thereby allowing the survey of all variants of the biosynthetic machineries for the targeted class of natural products. The utility of the method was demonstrated by surveying 100 strains, randomly selected from our actinomycete collection, for their biosynthetic potential of four classes of natural products, aromatic polyketides, reduced polyketides, nonribosomal peptides, and diterpenoids, identifying 16 talented strains. One of the talented strains, Streptomyces griseus CB00830, was finally chosen to showcase the discovery of the targeted classes of natural products, resulting in the isolation of three diterpenoids, six nonribosomal peptides and related metabolites, and three polyketides. Variations of this method should be applicable to the discovery of other classes of natural products.
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U2 - 10.1021/np401063s
DO - 10.1021/np401063s
M3 - Article
C2 - 24484381
AN - SCOPUS:84896869513
SN - 0163-3864
VL - 77
SP - 377
EP - 387
JO - Journal of Natural Products
JF - Journal of Natural Products
IS - 2
ER -