Phylogenetically related soil actinomycetes distinguish isolation sites by their metabolic activities

Author:

Kopecky Jan1,Kamenik Zdenek2,Omelka Marek3,Novotna Jitka1,Stefani Tommaso2,Sagova-Mareckova Marketa4ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Epidemiology and Ecology of Microorganisms, Crop Research Institute , 161 06 Prague , Czechia

2. Laboratory for Biology of Secondary Metabolism, Institute of Microbiology, Czech Acad Sci , 142 20 Prague , Czechia

3. Department of Probability and Mathematical Statistics, Faculty of Mathematics and Physics, Charles University , 186 75 Prague , Czechia

4. Department of Microbiology, Nutrition and Dietetics, Faculty of Agrobiology, Food and Natural Resources, Czech University of Life Sciences , 165 21 Prague , Czechia

Abstract

Abstract Soil environments are inhabited by microorganisms adapted to its diversified microhabitats. The metabolic activity of individual strains/populations reflects resources available at a particular spot, quality of which may not comply with broad soil characteristics. To explore the potential of individual strains to adapt to particular micro-niches of carbon sources, a set of 331 Actinomycetia strains were collected at ten sites differing in vegetation, soil pH, organic matter content and quality. The strains were isolated on the same complex medium with neutral pH and their metabolites analyzed by UHPLC and LC-MS/MS in spent cultivation medium (metabolic profiles). For all strains, their metabolic profiles correlated with soil pH and organic matter content of the original sites. In comparison, strains phylogeny based on either 16S rRNA or the beta-subunit of DNA-dependent RNA polymerase (rpoB) genes was partially correlated with soil organic matter content but not soil pH at the sites. Antimicrobial activities of strains against Kocuria rhizophila, Escherichia coli, and Saccharomyces cerevisiae were both site- and phylogeny-dependent. The precise adaptation of metabolic profiles to overall sites characteristics was further supported by the production of locally specific bioactive metabolites and suggested that carbon resources represent a significant selection pressure connected to specific antibiotic activities.

Funder

Ministry of Education, Youth and Sports

Ministry of Agriculture of the Czech Republic

Czech Academy of Sciences

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Applied Microbiology and Biotechnology,Ecology,Microbiology

Reference82 articles.

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