Deep Functional Profiling of Wild Animal Microbiomes Reveals Probiotic Bacillus pumilus Strains with a Common Biosynthetic Fingerprint.
Margarita N BaranovaArsen M KudzhaevYuliana A MokrushinaVladislav V BabenkoMaria A KornienkoMaja V MalakhovaVictor G YudinMaria P RubtsovaArthur O ZalevskyOlga A BelozerovaSergey KovalchukYuriy N ZhuravlevElena N IlinaAlexander G GabibovIvan V SmirnovStanislav S TerekhovPublished in: International journal of molecular sciences (2022)
The biodiversity of microorganisms is maintained by intricate nets of interactions between competing species. Impaired functionality of human microbiomes correlates with their reduced biodiversity originating from aseptic environmental conditions and antibiotic use. Microbiomes of wild animals are free of these selective pressures. Microbiota provides a protecting shield from invasion by pathogens in the wild, outcompeting their growth in specific ecological niches. We applied ultrahigh-throughput microfluidic technologies for functional profiling of microbiomes of wild animals, including the skin beetle, Siberian lynx, common raccoon dog, and East Siberian brown bear. Single-cell screening of the most efficient killers of the common human pathogen Staphylococcus aureus resulted in repeated isolation of Bacillus pumilus strains. While isolated strains had different phenotypes, all of them displayed a similar set of biosynthetic gene clusters (BGCs) encoding antibiotic amicoumacin, siderophore bacillibactin, and putative analogs of antimicrobials including bacilysin, surfactin, desferrioxamine, and class IId cyclical bacteriocin. Amicoumacin A (Ami) was identified as a major antibacterial metabolite of these strains mediating their antagonistic activity. Genome mining indicates that Ami BGCs with this architecture subdivide into three distinct families, characteristic of the B. pumilus , B. subtilis , and Paenibacillus species. While Ami itself displays mediocre activity against the majority of Gram-negative bacteria, isolated B. pumilus strains efficiently inhibit the growth of both Gram-positive S. aureus and Gram-negative E. coli in coculture. We believe that the expanded antagonistic activity spectrum of Ami-producing B. pumilus can be attributed to the metabolomic profile predetermined by their biosynthetic fingerprint. Ultrahigh-throughput isolation of natural probiotic strains from wild animal microbiomes, as well as their metabolic reprogramming, opens up a new avenue for pathogen control and microbiome remodeling in the food industry, agriculture, and healthcare.
Keyphrases
- escherichia coli
- gram negative
- single cell
- acute myocardial infarction
- healthcare
- multidrug resistant
- bacillus subtilis
- endothelial cells
- genetic diversity
- staphylococcus aureus
- high throughput
- climate change
- risk assessment
- human health
- induced pluripotent stem cells
- left ventricular
- pluripotent stem cells
- dna methylation
- heart failure
- atrial fibrillation
- wound healing
- molecular docking
- pseudomonas aeruginosa
- acute coronary syndrome