Investigating the biosynthetic potential of an Antarctic soil through metagenomics, cultivation, and heterologous expression

The growing problem of antibiotic resistance has led to the exploration of uncultured bacteria as sources of new antimicrobials. Metagenomic sequencing studies of samples from different environments have reported evidence of high biosynthetic gene cluster (BGC) diversity in metagenomes, and metageno...

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Main Author: Waschulin, Valentin
Format: Thesis
Language:unknown
Published: 2022
Subjects:
Online Access:https://wrap.warwick.ac.uk/175379/
https://wrap.warwick.ac.uk/175379/1/WRAP_THESIS_Waschulin_2022.pdf
http://webcat.warwick.ac.uk/record=b3884379
id ftuwarwick:oai:wrap.warwick.ac.uk:175379
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spelling ftuwarwick:oai:wrap.warwick.ac.uk:175379 2023-06-11T04:06:46+02:00 Investigating the biosynthetic potential of an Antarctic soil through metagenomics, cultivation, and heterologous expression Waschulin, Valentin 2022-04 application/pdf https://wrap.warwick.ac.uk/175379/ https://wrap.warwick.ac.uk/175379/1/WRAP_THESIS_Waschulin_2022.pdf http://webcat.warwick.ac.uk/record=b3884379 unknown https://wrap.warwick.ac.uk/175379/1/WRAP_THESIS_Waschulin_2022.pdf Waschulin, Valentin (2022) Investigating the biosynthetic potential of an Antarctic soil through metagenomics, cultivation, and heterologous expression. PhD thesis, University of Warwick. QH Natural history QH426 Genetics QR Microbiology Thesis NonPeerReviewed 2022 ftuwarwick 2023-04-27T22:42:06Z The growing problem of antibiotic resistance has led to the exploration of uncultured bacteria as sources of new antimicrobials. Metagenomic sequencing studies of samples from different environments have reported evidence of high biosynthetic gene cluster (BGC) diversity in metagenomes, and metagenomic library studies have yielded several novel natural products. However, accessing these compounds remains challenging. The constraints of short-read sequencing mean that the assembly of full-length BGC sequences from uncultured bacteria is nigh impossible, thus making assessment of BGC diversity difficult and downstream cloning infeasible. Conversely, metagenomic library approaches suffer from a bias towards known compounds as well as difficulties with expressing recovered BGCs. In the present work, a three-pronged approach was taken to access the biosynthetic diversity of bacteria from an Antarctic soil: A hybrid shotgun metagenome was sequenced and BGCs cloned and expressed, a novel regulatory gene-based screen for libraries was developed, and a number of isolates were obtained by culturing. Through metagenomic sequencing, many highly divergent BGCs were found in phyla such as Acidobacteriota and Verrucomicrobiota, but also the methanotrophic gammaproteobacterial order UBA7966. Sequencing of isolates obtained from the same soil indicated little overlap between the biosynthetic potential of readily cultured and uncultured bacteria. Several metagenomic BGCs were PCR-amplified, cloned and expressed in Pseudomonas and Streptomyces. While the sequencing of Streptomyces exconjugants showed that many inserts were truncated, a phenotype was observed in Pseudomonas. The library screening approach was validated in isolates, but the targets were absent in the metagenomic library used. In conclusion, the results uncover the rich diversity of BGCs from uncultured lineages present in the soil, show the potential of long-read sequencing to recover full-length BGCs from uncultured soil bacteria and demonstrate the feasibility of ... Thesis Antarc* Antarctic The University of Warwick: WRAP - Warwick Research Archive Portal Antarctic
institution Open Polar
collection The University of Warwick: WRAP - Warwick Research Archive Portal
op_collection_id ftuwarwick
language unknown
topic QH Natural history
QH426 Genetics
QR Microbiology
spellingShingle QH Natural history
QH426 Genetics
QR Microbiology
Waschulin, Valentin
Investigating the biosynthetic potential of an Antarctic soil through metagenomics, cultivation, and heterologous expression
topic_facet QH Natural history
QH426 Genetics
QR Microbiology
description The growing problem of antibiotic resistance has led to the exploration of uncultured bacteria as sources of new antimicrobials. Metagenomic sequencing studies of samples from different environments have reported evidence of high biosynthetic gene cluster (BGC) diversity in metagenomes, and metagenomic library studies have yielded several novel natural products. However, accessing these compounds remains challenging. The constraints of short-read sequencing mean that the assembly of full-length BGC sequences from uncultured bacteria is nigh impossible, thus making assessment of BGC diversity difficult and downstream cloning infeasible. Conversely, metagenomic library approaches suffer from a bias towards known compounds as well as difficulties with expressing recovered BGCs. In the present work, a three-pronged approach was taken to access the biosynthetic diversity of bacteria from an Antarctic soil: A hybrid shotgun metagenome was sequenced and BGCs cloned and expressed, a novel regulatory gene-based screen for libraries was developed, and a number of isolates were obtained by culturing. Through metagenomic sequencing, many highly divergent BGCs were found in phyla such as Acidobacteriota and Verrucomicrobiota, but also the methanotrophic gammaproteobacterial order UBA7966. Sequencing of isolates obtained from the same soil indicated little overlap between the biosynthetic potential of readily cultured and uncultured bacteria. Several metagenomic BGCs were PCR-amplified, cloned and expressed in Pseudomonas and Streptomyces. While the sequencing of Streptomyces exconjugants showed that many inserts were truncated, a phenotype was observed in Pseudomonas. The library screening approach was validated in isolates, but the targets were absent in the metagenomic library used. In conclusion, the results uncover the rich diversity of BGCs from uncultured lineages present in the soil, show the potential of long-read sequencing to recover full-length BGCs from uncultured soil bacteria and demonstrate the feasibility of ...
format Thesis
author Waschulin, Valentin
author_facet Waschulin, Valentin
author_sort Waschulin, Valentin
title Investigating the biosynthetic potential of an Antarctic soil through metagenomics, cultivation, and heterologous expression
title_short Investigating the biosynthetic potential of an Antarctic soil through metagenomics, cultivation, and heterologous expression
title_full Investigating the biosynthetic potential of an Antarctic soil through metagenomics, cultivation, and heterologous expression
title_fullStr Investigating the biosynthetic potential of an Antarctic soil through metagenomics, cultivation, and heterologous expression
title_full_unstemmed Investigating the biosynthetic potential of an Antarctic soil through metagenomics, cultivation, and heterologous expression
title_sort investigating the biosynthetic potential of an antarctic soil through metagenomics, cultivation, and heterologous expression
publishDate 2022
url https://wrap.warwick.ac.uk/175379/
https://wrap.warwick.ac.uk/175379/1/WRAP_THESIS_Waschulin_2022.pdf
http://webcat.warwick.ac.uk/record=b3884379
geographic Antarctic
geographic_facet Antarctic
genre Antarc*
Antarctic
genre_facet Antarc*
Antarctic
op_relation https://wrap.warwick.ac.uk/175379/1/WRAP_THESIS_Waschulin_2022.pdf
Waschulin, Valentin (2022) Investigating the biosynthetic potential of an Antarctic soil through metagenomics, cultivation, and heterologous expression. PhD thesis, University of Warwick.
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