Taxonomic and metabolic diversity of Actinomycetota isolated from faeces of a 28,000‐year‐old mammoth

Author:

van Bergeijk Doris A.12,Augustijn Hannah E.34,Elsayed Somayah S.3,Willemse Joost3,Carrión Victor J.356,Du Chao3,Urem Mia3,Grigoreva Lena V.7,Cheprasov Maksim Y.7,Grigoriev Semyon7,Jansen Hans8,Wintermans Bas9,Budding Andries E.10,Spaink Herman P.3,Medema Marnix H.34,van Wezel Gilles P.36ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Microbiology, Immunology and Transplantation (Laboratory of Molecular Bacteriology) KU Leuven Leuven Belgium

2. Center for Microbiology VIB Leuven Belgium

3. Institute of Biology Leiden University Leiden The Netherlands

4. Bioinformatics Group Wageningen University Wageningen The Netherlands

5. Department of Microbiology University of Málaga Málaga Spain

6. Department of Microbial Ecology Netherlands Institute of Ecology Wageningen The Netherlands

7. North‐Eastern Federal University Yakutsk Russia

8. Future Genomics Leiden The Netherlands

9. Department of Medical Microbiology Adrz Hospital Goes The Netherlands

10. Inbiome Amsterdam Netherlands

Abstract

AbstractAncient environmental samples, including permafrost soils and frozen animal remains, represent an archive with microbial communities that have barely been explored. This yet unexplored microbial world is a genetic resource that may provide us with new evolutionary insights into recent genomic changes, as well as novel metabolic pathways and chemistry. Here, we describe Actinomycetota Micromonospora, Oerskovia, Saccharopolyspora, Sanguibacter and Streptomyces species were successfully revived and their genome sequences resolved. Surprisingly, the genomes of these bacteria from an ancient source show a large phylogenetic distance to known strains and harbour many novel biosynthetic gene clusters that may well represent uncharacterised biosynthetic potential. Metabolic profiles of the strains display the production of known molecules like antimycin, conglobatin and macrotetrolides, but the majority of the mass features could not be dereplicated. Our work provides insights into Actinomycetota isolated from an ancient source, yielding unexplored genomic information that is not yet present in current databases.

Funder

Universiteit Leiden

European Research Council

Publisher

Wiley

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