Chang Preston T, Rao Krithika, Longo Lauren O, Lawton Elisabeth S, Scherer Georgia, Van Arnam Ethan B
Keck Science Department of Claremont McKenna, Pitzer, and Scripps Colleges, Claremont, California 91711, United States.
J Nat Prod. 2020 Mar 27;83(3):725-729. doi: 10.1021/acs.jnatprod.9b00897. Epub 2020 Jan 21.
Fungus-growing ants and their microbial symbionts have emerged as a model system for understanding antibiotic deployment in an ecological context. Here we establish that bacterial symbionts of the ant antagonize their most likely competitors, other strains of ant-associated bacteria, using the thiopeptide antibiotic GE37468. Genomic analysis suggests that these symbionts acquired the GE37468 gene cluster from soil bacteria. This antibiotic, with known activity against human pathogens, was previously identified in a biochemical screen but had no known ecological role. GE37468's host-associated defense role in this insect niche intriguingly parallels the function of similar thiopeptides in the human microbiome.
培养真菌的蚂蚁及其微生物共生体已成为在生态环境中理解抗生素应用的一个模型系统。在此,我们证实蚂蚁的细菌共生体利用硫肽抗生素GE37468对抗其最有可能的竞争者,即其他与蚂蚁相关的细菌菌株。基因组分析表明,这些共生体从土壤细菌中获得了GE37468基因簇。这种对人类病原体具有已知活性的抗生素,此前在生化筛选中已被鉴定,但尚无已知的生态作用。GE37468在这种昆虫生态位中与宿主相关的防御作用,有趣地类似于人类微生物组中类似硫肽的功能。