Unveiling the culturable and non‐culturable actinobacterial diversity in two macroalgae species from the northern Portuguese coast

Author:

Girão Mariana12ORCID,Alexandrino Diogo A. M.13ORCID,Cao Weiwei4,Costa Isabel1,Jia Zhongjun4,Carvalho Maria F.12

Affiliation:

1. CIIMAR—Interdisciplinary Centre of Marine and Environmental Research University of Porto Porto Portugal

2. ICBAS—School of Medicine and Biomedical Sciences University of Porto Porto Portugal

3. Department of Environmental Health School of Health Porto Portugal

4. State Key Laboratory of Soil and Sustainable Agriculture Institute of Soil Science, Chinese Academy of Sciences Nanjing China

Abstract

AbstractActinomycetota, associated with macroalgae, remains one of the least explored marine niches. The secondary metabolism of Actinomycetota, the primary microbial source of compounds relevant to biotechnology, continues to drive research into the distribution, dynamics, and metabolome of these microorganisms. In this study, we employed a combination of traditional cultivation and metagenomic analysis to investigate the diversity of Actinomycetota in two native macroalgae species from the Portuguese coast. We obtained and taxonomically identified a collection of 380 strains, which were distributed across 12 orders, 15 families, and 25 genera affiliated with the Actinomycetia class, with Streptomyces making up approximately 60% of the composition. Metagenomic results revealed the presence of Actinomycetota in both Chondrus crispus and Codium tomentosum datasets, with relative abundances of 11% and 2%, respectively. This approach identified 12 orders, 16 families, and 17 genera affiliated with Actinomycetota, with minimal overlap with the cultivation results. Acidimicrobiales emerged as the dominant actinobacterial order in both macroalgae, although no strain affiliated with this taxonomic group was successfully isolated. Our findings suggest that macroalgae represent a hotspot for Actinomycetota. The synergistic use of both culture‐dependent and independent approaches proved beneficial, enabling the identification and recovery of not only abundant but also rare taxonomic members.

Funder

Fundação para a Ciência e a Tecnologia

European Regional Development Fund

Publisher

Wiley

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