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Single-cell metabolite detection and genomics reveals uncultivated talented producer

Authors :
Masato Kogawa
Rimi Miyaoka
Franziska Hemmerling
Masahiro Ando
Kei Yura
Keigo Ide
Yohei Nishikawa
Masahito Hosokawa
Yuji Ise
Jackson K B Cahn
Kentaro Takada
Shigeki Matsunaga
Tetsushi Mori
Jörn Piel
Haruko Takeyama
Source :
PNAS Nexus, 1 (1)
Publication Year :
2022
Publisher :
Oxford University Press, 2022.

Abstract

The production of bioactive metabolites is increasingly recognized as an important function of host-associated bacteria. An example is defensive symbiosis that might account for much of the chemical richness of marine invertebrates including sponges (Porifera), 1 of the oldest metazoans. However, most bacterial members of sponge microbiomes have not been cultivated or sequenced, and therefore, remain unrecognized. Unequivocally linking metabolic functions to a cellular source in sponge microbiomes is, therefore, a challenge. Here, we report an analysis pipeline of microfluidic encapsulation, Raman microscopy, and integrated digital genomics (MERMAID) for an efficient identification of uncultivated producers. We applied this method to the chemically rich bacteriosponge (sponge that hosts a rich bacterial community) Theonella swinhoei, previously shown to contain ‘Entotheonella’ symbionts that produce most of the bioactive substances isolated from the sponge. As an exception, the antifungal aurantosides had remained unassigned to a source. Raman-guided single-bacterial analysis and sequencing revealed a cryptic, distinct multiproducer, ‘Candidatus Poriflexus aureus’ from a new Chloroflexi lineage as the aurantoside producer. Its exceptionally large genome contains numerous biosynthetic loci and suggested an even higher chemical richness of this sponge than previously appreciated. This study highlights the importance of complementary technologies to uncover microbiome functions, reveals remarkable parallels between distantly related symbionts of the same host, and adds functional support for diverse chemically prolific lineages being present in microbial dark matter.<br />PNAS Nexus, 1 (1)<br />ISSN:2752-6542

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
27526542
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
PNAS Nexus, 1 (1)
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....bb92a0e9013ce3d5cda373f64eb4d60f