Affiliation:
1. Department of Biotechnology and Biomedicine, Center for Microbial Secondary Metabolites, Technical University of Denmark, Kgs. Lyngby, Denmark
2. Department of Chemistry, University of Aberdeen, King’s College, Aberdeen, United Kingdom
Abstract
ABSTRACT
Many bacteria co-exist and produce antibiotics, yet we know little about how they cope and occupy the same niche. The purpose of the present study was to determine if and how two potent antibiotic-producing marine bacteria influence the secondary metabolome of each other. We established an agar- and broth-based system allowing co-existence of a
Phaeobacter
species and
Pseudoalteromonas piscicida
that, respectively, produce tropodithietic acid (TDA) and bromoalterochromides (BACs). Co-culturing of
Phaeobacter
sp. strain A36a-5a on Marine Agar with
P. piscicida
strain B39bio caused a reduction of TDA production in the
Phaeobacter
colony. We constructed a transcriptional gene reporter fusion in the
tdaC
gene in the TDA biosynthetic pathway in
Phaeobacter
and demonstrated that the reduction of TDA by
P. piscicida
was due to the suppression of the TDA biosynthesis. A stable liquid co-cultivation system was developed, and the expression of
tdaC
in
Phaeobacter
was reduced eightfold lower (per cell) in the co-culture compared to the monoculture. Mass spectrometry imaging of co-cultured colonies revealed a reduction of TDA and indicated that BACs diffused into the
Phaeobacter
colony. BACs were purified from
Pseudoalteromonas
; however, when added as pure compounds or a mixture they did not influence TDA production. In co-culture, the metabolome was dominated by
Pseudoalteromonas
features indicating that production of other
Phaeobacter
compounds besides TDA was reduced. In conclusion, co-existence of two antibiotic-producing bacteria may be allowed by one causing reduction in the antagonistic potential of the other. The reduction (here of TDA) was not caused by degradation but by a yet uncharacterized mechanism allowing
Pseudoalteromonas
to reduce expression of the TDA biosynthetic pathway.
IMPORTANCE
The drug potential of antimicrobial secondary metabolites has been the main driver of research into these compounds. However, in recent years, their natural role in microbial systems and microbiomes has become important to determine the assembly and development of microbiomes. Herein, we demonstrate that two potent antibiotic-producing bacteria can co-exist, and one mechanism allowing the co-existence is the specific reduction of antibiotic production in one bacterium by the other. Understanding the molecular mechanisms in complex interactions provides insights for applied uses, such as when developing TDA-producing bacteria for use as biocontrol in aquaculture.
Funder
Danmarks Grundforskningsfond
Novo Nordisk Fonden
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology