Naphthalenone production in Aspergillus parvulus

1979 ◽  
Vol 25 (2) ◽  
pp. 130-137 ◽  
Author(s):  
C. D. Bartman ◽  
I. M. Campbell

The naphthalenones asparvenone and its 6-O-methyl ether are produced by Aspergillus parvulus during vegetative growth in batch-mode, shaken cultures in a glucose–glycine–salts medium. The secondary metabolites first appear around the time when hyphae of developing spores begin to make contact with each other, i.e. at a very early stage of culture development. Resuspension in new medium of mycelium that is producing the naphthalenones fails to inhibit production. When A. parvulus is grown in parallel on a glucose–glycine–salts medium and on a glucose–malt–peptone medium, the naphthalenones appear first in the richer medium despite the fact that biomass proliferation is relatively unrestricted in that medium. Radiolabelled [1-14C]-acetate is taken up quickly by the fungus (k = 0.09 min−1) and is incorporated effectively into the naphthalenones.

2021 ◽  
Vol 11 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Mathias Fink ◽  
Monika Cserjan-Puschmann ◽  
Daniela Reinisch ◽  
Gerald Striedner

AbstractTremendous advancements in cell and protein engineering methodologies and bioinformatics have led to a vast increase in bacterial production clones and recombinant protein variants to be screened and evaluated. Consequently, an urgent need exists for efficient high-throughput (HTP) screening approaches to improve the efficiency in early process development as a basis to speed-up all subsequent steps in the course of process design and engineering. In this study, we selected the BioLector micro-bioreactor (µ-bioreactor) system as an HTP cultivation platform to screen E. coli expression clones producing representative protein candidates for biopharmaceutical applications. We evaluated the extent to which generated clones and condition screening results were transferable and comparable to results from fully controlled bioreactor systems operated in fed-batch mode at moderate or high cell densities. Direct comparison of 22 different production clones showed great transferability. We observed the same growth and expression characteristics, and identical clone rankings except one host-Fab-leader combination. This outcome demonstrates the explanatory power of HTP µ-bioreactor data and the suitability of this platform as a screening tool in upstream development of microbial systems. Fast, reliable, and transferable screening data significantly reduce experiments in fully controlled bioreactor systems and accelerate process development at lower cost.


2017 ◽  
Author(s):  
Danner Sagala ◽  
Eka Suzanna ◽  
Prihanani ◽  
Munif Ghulamahdi ◽  
Iskandar Lubis ◽  
...  

This article was presented in the 1st International Conference on Tropical Studies and Its Application (ICTROPS) in the year 2017. The pre-printed version title was "The earlier soybean suffers from aluminum stress, the more its vegetative growth is disrupted". Then, this article is published in IOP Conf. Series: Earth and Environmental Science titling "Effect of aluminum stress in early-stage growth of soybean". The change of the title was done as reviewer suggested. So, This is the post-printed version and reader can access the published version of this article in IOP Conf. Series: Earth and Environmental Science 144 (2018) 012067, doi :10.1088/1755-1315/144/1/012067


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Yan Ma ◽  
Minhua Xu ◽  
Hancong Liu ◽  
Tiantian Yu ◽  
Ping Guo ◽  
...  

Abstract Background: As we all know, bacterial and fungal infections have become one of the threats to human health. Microbial secondary metabolites are one of the main sources of bioactive natural products. It is estimated that around 60% of all foregone antibiotics are derived from secondary metabolites produced by filamentous actinomycete bacteria. Gordonia spp. are members of the actinomycete family, their contribution to the environment improvement and environmental protection by their biological degradation ability, but there are few studies on their antimicrobial activity of their secondary metabolites. Our team isolated a Gordonia strain WA 4-31 with anti-Candida albicans activity from the intestinal tract of Periplaneta americana in the early stage.Results: In this study, we firstly identified the strain WA 4-31 by the morphological characteristics and the phylogenetic analyses, and found that it homologous to a strain of Gordonia from the Indian desert (EU333873) by 100%. Then four compounds, Actinomycin D (1), Actinomycin X2 (2), Mojavensin A (3) and cyclic (leucine-leucne) dipeptide (4) were purified from the EtOH extract of the fermented broth of the strain. The compounds 1-4 had activities against Candida albicans, Aspergillus niger, Aspergillus fumigatus and Trichophyton rubrum. They also had activities against MRSA, S.aureus, K.peneumoniae and E.coli in different degree. The minimum inhibitory concentration of Actinomycin D and Actinomycin X2 on MASA was 0.25 μg/mL. Interestingly, we found that when Mojavensin A was mixed with compound 4 ratio of 1:1, the solution of the compounds was better than the single on anti-Candida albicans. Besides, compounds 1-3 had varying degrees of cytotoxicity on CNE-2 cells and HepG-2 cells.Conclusions: The present study firstly reported the antimicrobial compounds isolated from Gordonia. These indicated that rare actinomycetes from the intestinal tract of Periplaneta americana possessed a potential as a source of active secondary metabolites.


2019 ◽  
Vol 11 (2) ◽  
pp. 385
Author(s):  
Katiane Santiago Silva Benett ◽  
Ricardo Caldas Xavier ◽  
Cleiton Gredson Sabin Benett ◽  
Leandro Caixeta Salomão ◽  
Alexsander Seleguini ◽  
...  

Vegetable development and productivity are influenced by several factors, including the nutrient amounts available. Providing adequate nitrogen favours vegetative growth and promotes increased productivity, in addition to providing greater succulence and improving leaf quality. This work evaluated the effect of nitrogen doses and sources on arugula culture development and productivity. The experiment was conducted on the experimental farm at the State University of Goiás, Ipameri campus, in the municipality of Ipameri, Goiás state (GO). The experiment used a 2 × 5 factorial randomized complete block design, with two sources (normal urea and coated urea), five nitrogen doses (0, 60, 120, 180 and 240 kg ha-1 of N) and four replicates. Plant height, stem diameter, leaf number, fresh shoot matter, dry shoot matter and productivity were evaluated. The results obtained here suggest that nitrogen sources do not influence arugula culture development, but nitrogen doses influence the arugula culture’s productive characteristics.


2011 ◽  
Vol 6 (2) ◽  
pp. 1934578X1100600
Author(s):  
Sibel Avunduk ◽  
Özgen Alankuş-Çalişkan ◽  
Tomofumi Miyamoto ◽  
Chiaki Tanaka ◽  
Marie-Aleth Lacaille-Dubois

Two novel secondary metabolites, compounds (1–2) were isolated from the roots of Paronychia chionaea. On the basis of spectroscopic data including 1D and 2D NMR experiments (COSY, TOCSY, HSQC, and HMBC), and mass spectroscopy, their structures were established as 6- C-[α-L-arabinopyranosyl-(1→2)-β-D-glucopyranosyl]-7- O-[β-D-glucopyranosyl]-luteolin 3′-methyl ether (1), and 2-(methoxy)-2-(3,5-dimethoxy 4-hydroxyphenyl)-ethane-1,2-diol 1- O-β-D-glucopyranoside (2).


2020 ◽  
Vol 10 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Nisha Dhiman ◽  
Anil Kumar ◽  
Dinesh Kumar ◽  
Amita Bhattacharya

Abstract The study is the first report on de novo transcriptome analysis of Nardostachys jatamansi, a critically endangered medicinal plant of alpine Himalayas. Illumina GAIIx sequencing of plants collected during end of vegetative growth (August) yielded 48,411 unigenes. 74.45% of these were annotated using UNIPROT. GO enrichment analysis, KEGG pathways and PPI network indicated simultaneous utilization of leaf photosynthates for flowering, rhizome fortification, stress response and tissue-specific secondary metabolites biosynthesis. Among the secondary metabolite biosynthesis genes, terpenoids were predominant. UPLC-PDA analysis of in vitro plants revealed temperature-dependent, tissue-specific differential distribution of various phenolics. Thus, as compared to 25 °C, the phenolic contents of both leaves (gallic acid and rutin) and roots (p-coumaric acid and cinnamic acid) were higher at 15 °C. These phenolics accounted for the therapeutic properties reported in the plant. In qRT-PCR of in vitro plants, secondary metabolite biosynthesis pathway genes showed higher expression at 15 °C and 14 h/10 h photoperiod (conditions representing end of vegetative growth period). This provided cues for in vitro modulation of identified secondary metabolites. Such modulation of secondary metabolites in in vitro systems can eliminate the need for uprooting N. jatamansi from wild. Hence, the study is a step towards effective conservation of the plant.


1985 ◽  
Vol 48 (1) ◽  
pp. 80-91 ◽  
Author(s):  
E. E. STINSON

Alternaria produce a wide assortment of toxic and nontoxic secondary metabolites. A brief summary of the numerous secondary metabolites of Alternaria and their toxicity is followed by a presentation of the current view of the polyketide biosynthetic mechanism and its application to the biosynthesis of these compounds. Possible mechanisms for the biosynthesis of alternariol, alternariol methyl ether, and other dibenzo-α-pyrones are presented, as well as mechanisms for the biosynthesis of tenuazonic acid and altertoxin I. Bioregulation of the production of these materials by light, heat, nutrients and NADPH production, and the role of mannitol in NADPH formation are also discussed.


1988 ◽  
Vol 235 (1279) ◽  
pp. 121-138 ◽  

Streptomycetes are soil bacteria that differ from the genetically well-known Escherichia coli in two striking characteristics. (1) Instead of consisting of an alternation of growth and fission of morphologically simple, undifferentiated rods, the streptomycete life cycle involves the formation of a system of elongated, branching hyphae which, after a period of vegetative growth, respond to specific signals by producing specialized spore-bearing structures. (2) The streptomycetes produce an unrivalled range of chemically diverse ‘secondary metabolites’, which we recognize as antibiotics, herbicides and pharmacologically active molecules, and which presumably play an important role in the streptomycete life cycle in nature. This ‘physiological’ differentiation is often tem­porally associated with the morphological differentiation of sporulation and there are common elements in the regulation of the two sets of processes. In the model system provided by Streptomyces coelicolor A3(2), the isolation of several whole clusters of linked antibiotic biosynthetic pathway genes, and some key regulatory genes involved in sporulation, has made it possible to study the basis for the switching on and off of particular sets of genes during morphological and ‘physiological’ differen­tiation. Genetic analysis clearly reveals a regulatory cascade operating at several levels in a ‘physiological’ branch of the differentiation control system. At the lowest level, within individual clusters of antibiotic biosynthesis genes are genes with a role as activators of the structural genes for the pathway enzymes, and also resistance genes. It is attractive to speculate that the latter play a dual role: protecting the organism from self-destruction by its own potentially lethal product, and forming an essential component of a regulatory circuit that activates the biosyn­thetic genes, thus ensuring that resistance is established before any antibiotic is made. A next higher level of regulation is revealed by the isolation of mutations in a gene ( afsB ) required for expression (probably at the level of transcription) of all five known secondary metabolic pathways in the organism. At a higher level still, the bldA gene, whose product seems to be a tRNA essential to translate the rare (in high [G + C] Streptomyces DNA) TTA leucine codon, controls or influences the whole gamut of morphological and ‘physiological’ differentiation, because bldA mutants fail to produce either secondary metabolites or aerial mycelium and spores, while growing normally in the vegetative phase. Thus a decision to switch from vegetative growth to the secondary phase of colonial development may be taken at the level of translation. In the ‘morphological’ branch of the proposed regulatory cascade, a key gene is whiG whose product, essential for the earliest known step in the metamorphosis of aerial hyphae into spore chains, appears to be an RNA polymerase sigma factor which is not needed for transcription of vegetative genes, but seems to control, at the level of transcription, the decision to sporulate.


2000 ◽  
Vol 182 (4) ◽  
pp. 898-904 ◽  
Author(s):  
Saori Kosono ◽  
Yoshiaki Ohashi ◽  
Fujio Kawamura ◽  
Makio Kitada ◽  
Toshiaki Kudo

ABSTRACT ShaA (sodium/hydrogen antiporter, previously termed YufT [or NtrA]), which is responsible for Na+/H+antiporter activity, is considered to be the major Na+excretion system in Bacillus subtilis. We found that ashaA-disrupted mutant of B. subtilis shows impaired sporulation but normal vegetative growth when the external Na+ concentration was increased in a low range. In theshaA mutant, ςH-dependent expression ofspo0A (PS) and spoVG at an early stage of sporulation was sensitive to external NaCl. The level of ςH protein was reduced by the addition of NaCl, while the expression of spo0H, which encodes ςH, was little affected, indicating that posttranscriptional control of ςH rather than spo0H transcription is affected by the addition of NaCl in the shaA mutant. Since this mutant is considered to have a diminished ability to maintain a low internal Na+ concentration, an increased level of internal Na+ may affect posttranscriptional control of ςH. Bypassing the phosphorelay by introducing thesof-1 mutation into this mutant did not restorespo0A (PS) expression, suggesting that disruption of shaA affects ςH accumulation, but does not interfere with the phosphorylation and phosphotransfer reactions of the phosphorelay. These results suggest that ShaA plays a significant role at an early stage of sporulation and not only during vegetative growth. Our findings raise the possibility that fine control of cytoplasmic ion levels, including control of the internal Na+ concentration, may be important for the progression of the sporulation process.


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