Gut Symbionts from Distinct Hosts Exhibit Genotoxic Activity via Divergent Colibactin Biosynthesis Pathways

Author:

Engel Philipp1234,Vizcaino Maria I.23,Crawford Jason M.235

Affiliation:

1. Department of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology, Yale University, New Haven, Connecticut, USA

2. Department of Chemistry, Yale University, New Haven, Connecticut, USA

3. Yale University, New Haven, Connecticut, USA; Chemical Biology Institute, Yale University, West Haven, Connecticut, USA

4. Department of Fundamental Microbiology, University of Lausanne, Lausanne, Switzerland

5. Department of Microbial Pathogenesis, Yale School of Medicine, New Haven, Connecticut, USA

Abstract

ABSTRACT Secondary metabolites produced by nonribosomal peptide synthetase (NRPS) or polyketide synthase (PKS) pathways are chemical mediators of microbial interactions in diverse environments. However, little is known about their distribution, evolution, and functional roles in bacterial symbionts associated with animals. A prominent example is colibactin, a largely unknown family of secondary metabolites produced by Escherichia coli via a hybrid NRPS-PKS biosynthetic pathway that inflicts DNA damage upon eukaryotic cells and contributes to colorectal cancer and tumor formation in the mammalian gut. Thus far, homologs of this pathway have only been found in closely related Enterobacteriaceae , while a divergent variant of this gene cluster was recently discovered in a marine alphaproteobacterial Pseudovibrio strain. Herein, we sequenced the genome of Frischella perrara PEB0191, a bacterial gut symbiont of honey bees and identified a homologous colibactin biosynthetic pathway related to those found in Enterobacteriaceae . We show that the colibactin genomic island (GI) has conserved gene synteny and biosynthetic module architecture across F. perrara , Enterobacteriaceae , and the Pseudovibrio strain. Comparative metabolomics analyses of F. perrara and E. coli further reveal that these two bacteria produce related colibactin pathway-dependent metabolites. Finally, we demonstrate that F. perrara , like E. coli , causes DNA damage in eukaryotic cells in vitro in a colibactin pathway-dependent manner. Together, these results support that divergent variants of the colibactin biosynthetic pathway are widely distributed among bacterial symbionts, producing related secondary metabolites and likely endowing its producer with functional capabilities important for diverse symbiotic associations.

Publisher

American Society for Microbiology

Subject

Ecology,Applied Microbiology and Biotechnology,Food Science,Biotechnology

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