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Please note that the following presentation may change slightlybefore the Summer School starts, but it has been provided now for those of you leaving home soon, and who need to print it out.
If you print out at three slides per page, you will have space adjacentto each slide to add notes.
Looking forward to seeing you all in Split.
Best regards,
Mervyn Bibb
Mining Biodiversity for New Antibiotics
Mervyn Bibb
Department of Molecular MicrobiologyJohn Innes Centre, Norwich
There is a very real and urgent need for new antibiotics
Metagenomics
New approaches are needed
High-throughput culturing
A wealth of unexplored microbial diversity
Microorganisms in the Environment
Habitat Cultured (%) Seawater 0.001 - 0.1 Freshwater 0.25 Soil 0.3 Activated Sludge 1.0 - 15.0 Gut 1.0 – 50.0
A wealth of unexplored microbial genomes
• Less than 1% of all microorganisms have been cultured under laboratory conditions: wealth of unexplored biochemistry and enzymology
• Many of these uncultivated microbes exist in complex, competitive communities - potentially source of novel biologically active compounds
• How can these organisms and communities be explored and potentially exploited?
Sponges
Hot springsSoil
Deep ocean tube worms
Metagenomics
What is metagenomics?
Culture-independent genomic analysis of microbial communities and their physiology
Academic
Nature 428: 37-47 (2004)
• Acidophilic biofilm• pH 0.5, 40oC, FeS2
• Bacteria (Leptospirillum)• Archaea (Ferroplasma)
• Produces acid mine drainage• Worldwide environmental problem
Environmental or Community Genomics
• Environmental genomics
• Shotgun sequence
• 2 “complete” and 3 partial genomes of uncultivatedmicrobes
• Reconstruct metabolism
• Shared metabolic rolesin biofilm formation andsustainability
• Explore community metabolic network
• Culture and explore uncultivated microbes
Science 308: 554-557 (2005)
Agricultural soilDeep-sea whale fall carcasses
Environmental or Community Genomics
Science 312: 1355-1359 (2006)
Human gut
What is metagenomics?
Works well for enzyme discovery
Culture-independent exploitation of untapped microbial biodiversity
Industrial
Metagenomics for enzyme discovery
Environmental DNA
Cloned (small inserts) in E. coli
HT screen for enzyme activity
Gene/enzyme readily characterised and manipulated
GigaMatrix™100,000 wells in the
footprint of a 96-well plate
Nitrilases in the Public Database
Eukaryoticnitrilases
Bacterialnitrilases
Fungalcyanide
hydratases
24
Nitriles Acids Diversa Corporation
236
New Nitrilase Diversity
Robertson et al. (2004)AEM 70:2429/2436
Eukaryotic
Microbial
Fungalcyanide
hydratases
Bacterialnitrilases
Diversa Corporation
What is metagenomics?
Industrial
Culture-independent exploitation of untapped microbial biodiversity
Works well for enzyme discovery
Can it work effectively for small molecule (antibiotic) discovery?
Traditional approach to antibiotic discovery
New clinically useful antibiotics
Accessing uncultured microbial diversity - Metagenomics
Isolate environmental DNA (e-DNA)
Insert e-DNA into convenient bacterial host
Screen for antibiotic activity
Readily characterized and manipulated
Streptomycescoelicolor
Metagenomics can yield new natural products
☺ ☺
☺
Can it be de done on an industrial scale and yield complex, biologically active molecules in the numbers required to support drug discovery?
What is needed?
Indirubin
Terragine ATurbomycin ATurbomycin B☺
Violacein Deoxyviolacein
Long chain N-acyl amino acidsFatty dienic alcohol isomers
What do you need for an efficient metagenomic approach to new natural products?
• “Secondary metabolites” are products of complex pathways, derived from common precursors
• Biosynthetic genes clustered
• Biosynthetic clusters range from ca. 15 kb to >120 kb
• Cloning requires specialized fosmid and BAC/PAC vectors
• Expression of pathway genes requires appropriate host (e.g. Streptomyces sp.)
•Relaxed expression requirements
•Genetically manipulable – enhance natural product biosynthesis
•Understanding of the physiology of the organism (for precursor supply)
•Understanding of the regulatory circuitry to effect efficient expression
• High-throughput screening
• Requires expertise in natural product isolation and characterisation
Actinorhodin is a blue-pigmented Type II polyketide – ca. 25 kb cluster with ca. 20 genes
Directed mutations enhanced productivity 60 to 250 fold above wild type (depending on heterologous pathway expressed)
The host is critical: knowledge-based improvement of antibiotic production in S. diversaTM
Diversa Corporation
Used to express large gene clusters froma variety of actinomycetes
and pseudomads
Colonypick
Agar plug assay
Expression hoste.g. Streptomyces
diversaTM
Master plate96 well agar plate
Pintool
Liquid: solvent extracts
E. coli conjugativefosmid/PAC library
Screen against, e.g. E. coli, Str. pneumoniaeSta. aureus and C. albicans
Screening metagenomic libraries for anti-microbial activity
“Environmental” sample
Diversa Corporation
• Unbiased approach – environmental DNA
Where should we look?
• Targeted approach
• High molecular weight and digestible DNA
• Representative libraries – dominant species – normalised libraries?
• Large numbers to screen
• Issues:
• Proven, but intractable sources of novel chemical diversity- quasi-metagenomics (Quasi: Resembling, seeming, virtual)
Antibiotics from microbes
Origin Number
Actinomycetes 9120
Other bacteria 1640
Fungi (moulds) 4140
Antibiotics made by Actinomycetes
Application Examples
Anti-bacterial ErythromycinTetracyclinesKanamycin
Anti-cancer Doxorubicin
Immuno-
suppression
FK 506
Anti-fungal Canesten
Application Examples
Livestock
rearing
MonensinTylosinVirginiamycin
Anti-parasitic Avermectin
Fungicide PolyoxinKasugamycin
Herbicide Basta
AgricultureMedicine
ChloramphenicolCephamycinVancomycin
• Unbiased approach – environmental DNA – issues:
• High molecular weight and digestible DNA• Representative libraries – dominant species• Large numbers to screen
• Proven, but intractable sources of novel chemical diversity – quasi-metagenomics
• Rare (difficult to culture) actinomycetes - rifamycins, erythromycin, teichoplanin, vancomycin, gentamicin, ramoplanin, dalbavancin
• Marine actinomycetes
Where should we look?
PAC Library Screening in Streptomyces diversaTM
Strain Total Clones
Mean Insert Size (kb)
>100kb
Actinomycete (unknown) 1536 120 85%
Pseudonocardia 2304 76 45%
Saccharopolyspora 1920 95 65%
Streptosporangium 1536 90 50%
Microbispora 1536 110 75%
Saccharothrix 1536 125 90%
Amycolatopsis 1920 83 40%
Actinoplanes 2304 80 40%
Amycolatopsis 1920 125 N.D.
Saccharopolyspora 1920 95 N.D.
Actinomycete mixture 4608 115 75%
Actinomycete mixture 4608 91 70%
PAC Library Screening in Streptomyces diversaTM
Strain Clones screened
E. coli (ESS) hits
S. aureushits
Pseudonocardia 1500 23 2
Saccharopolyspora 1500 3 0
Streptosporangium 1500 20 1
Microbispora 1500 1 N.D.
Amycolatopsis 1300 16 N.D.
E. coli hit S. aureus hit
Compound Source Activity
Abyssomicins Verrucosispora sp. ABAureoverticillactam Streptomyces aureoverticillatus ACBonactin Streptomyces sp. AB, AFCaprolactones Streptomyces sp. ACChandrananimycins Actinomadura sp. AA, AB, AC, AFChinikomycins Streptomyces sp. ACChloro-dihydroquinones Novel actinomycete AB, ACDiazepinomicin (ECO-4601) Micromonospora sp. AB, AC, AI3,6-disubstituted indoles Streptomyces sp. ACFrigocyclinone Streptomyces griseus ABGlaciapyrroles Streptomyces sp. ABGutingimycin Streptomyces sp. ABHelquinoline Janibacter limosus ABHimalomycins Streptomyces sp. ABIB-00208 Actinomadura sp. ACKomodoquinone A Streptomyces sp. NALajollamycin Streptomyces nodosus ABMarinomycins ‘Marinispora’ AB, ACMechercharmycins Thermoactinomyces sp. ACMKN-349A Nocardiopsis sp. UnknownSalinosporamide A (NPI-0052) Salinispora tropica ACSporolides Salinispora tropica UnknownTrioxacarcins Streptomyces sp. AB, AC, AM
AB antibacterial, AC anticancer, AF antifungal, AI anti-inflamatory, AM antimalarial, NA Neuritogenic activity
Novel metabolites made by “marine” actinomycetes 2003–2005
Lam - Current Opinion in Microbiology 9: 245-251 (2006)
Marine actinomycetes
Mining marine microorganisms as a source of new antimicrobials and antifungalsBernan VS, Greenstein M, Carter GTCurr Med Chem – Ant-Infective Agents 3: 181-195 (2004)
Journal of Industrial Microbiology & Biotechnology (1999) 23, 178–187
Where should we look?
Tropical terrestrial actinomycetes
Diversity of Actinoplanes and related genera isolated from an Italian soil
Mazza P, Monciardini P, Cavaletti L, Sosio M, Donadio S
Vicuron Pharmaceuticals, via R. Lepetit 34, 21040 Gerenzano (VA), Italy.
Actinoplanes and related genera are good producers of bioactive secondary metabolites. However, many strains within these genera present similar morphological characteristics, and this prevents an effective discrimination of replicate strains during industrial isolation and screening programs. Using PCR-RFLP analysis of the 23S rDNA gene and of the 16S-23S intergenic spacer, we have analyzed 182 strains of Actinoplanes and related genera obtained through a selective isolation method from a single Italian soil. Combining the 23S and IGS data, 99 unique profiles were observed, and morphologically undistinguishable strains were discriminated. Further analyses on a restricted number of strains through 16S sequencing and hybridization to a probe for secondary metabolism established a good correlation between strain diversity seen by PCR-RFLP and that seen by the other methods. Overall, the data indicate the presence of a high diversity of Actinoplanes and related genera isolated from a single Italian soil.
Microbial Ecology 45: 362-372 (2003)
Where should we look?Back garden?
Antibiotic-producing ability by representatives of a newly discovered lineage of actinomycetes
Busti E, Monciardini P, Cavaletti L, Bamonte R, Lazzarini A, Sosio M, Donadio S
Vicuron Pharmaceuticals, via R. Lepetit 34, 21040 Gerenzano, Italy
The discovery of new antibiotics and other bioactive microbial metabolites continues to be an important objective in new drug research. Since extensive screening has led to the discovery of thousands of bioactive microbial molecules, new approaches must be taken in order to reduce the probability of rediscovering known compounds. The authors have recently isolated slow-growing acidophiles belonging to the novel genera Catenulispora and Actinospica within the order Actinomycetales. These strains, which likely belong to a new suborder, grow as filamentous mycelia,have a genome size around 8 Mb, and produce antimicrobial activities. In addition, a single strain harbours simultaneously genes encoding type I and type II polyeketide synthases, as well as non-ribosomal peptide synthetases. The metabolite produced by one strain was identified as a previously reported dimeric isochromanequinone. In addition, at least the Catenulispora strains appear globally distributed, since a PCR-specific signal could bedetected in a significant fraction of acidic soils from different continents, and similar strains have been independently isolated from an Australian soil (Jospeh et al., Appl Environ Microbiol 69, 7210–7215, 2003). Thus, these previously uncultured actinomycetes share several features with Streptomyces and related antibiotic-producing genera, and represent a promising source of novel antibiotics.
Microbiology 152: 675–683 (2006)
Sources of polyketides and non-ribosomal peptides
Donadio S, Busti E, Monciardini P, Bamonte R, Mazza P, Sosio M, Cavaletti L
Vicuron Pharmaceutical, Gerenzano, Italy
Ernst Schering Research Foundation Workshop 51:19-41 (2005)
Where should we look?
• Microbial symbionts – sources of potent anti-tumour compounds (PKS-NRPS)
Where should we look?
Uncultured sponge symbionts
Uncultured Pseudomonas sp.(beetle symbiont)
• Myxobacteria – many difficult to culture
Piel et al. (2004) PNAS 101:16222/16227
Joern Piel
Sensitive high-throughput screening of metagenomic libraries for biological activity
• Use a gene reporter system to detect a transcriptional response to an anti-bacterial agent
• Greater sensitivity than growth inhibition assay
• Amenable to high-throughput FACS-based screening
• Screens can be directed towards particular aspects of cell physiology(mode of action) e.g. cell wall biosynthesis – fuse specific stress-
induced promoters to GFP
Co-encapsulation of a tetracycline (Tc) producer with a Tc-responsive GFP reporter
Tc+ Tc-
Diversa Corporation
What is metagenomics?
Industrial
Culture-independent exploitation of untapped microbial biodiversity
Works well for enzyme discovery
Can it work effectively for small molecule (antibiotic) discovery?
Yes – requires technology development, concerted multi-disciplinary effort, and financial and lengthy commitment
Metagenomics can yield new natural products
☺ ☺
☺
Indirubin
Terragine ATurbomycin ATurbomycin B☺
Violacein Deoxyviolacein
Long chain N-acyl amino acidsFatty dienic alcohol isomers
Many more to come
Genome scanning – the Ecopia way
• Focus on cryptic pathways in actinomycetes
• Construct small and large (cosmid and BAC) insert libraries
• Sequence one end of small inserts (up to 700 nt) – Genome Sequence Tags– 1000 GSTs of 8.5 Mb genome – sample every 8.5 kb on average– 20 – 200 kb cluster represented 2 – 20 times
• Compare sequences to microbial natural product (NP) gene/enzyme database
• Use small inserts containing NP biosynthetic gene(s) to probe large insert library
• Sequence large insert(s)
• Reconstruct biosynthetic gene cluster in silico and predict structure
• Screen for growth conditions that induce expression of novel compounds
Genome scanning – the Ecopia way
• Used to identify over 450 actinomycete natural product gene clusters :
• Enediyne anti-tumour compounds (Type 1 PKS)
• Dynemicin (Micromonospora chersina)
• Macromomycin (Streptomyces macromyceticus)
(8/50 actinomycetes not known to make enediynes contained enediyne-like gene clusters – widely distributed across many genera – likely to encode new classes of enediynes)
Calicheamicin Dynemicin C-1027
Genome scanning – the Ecopia way
• Used to identify over 450 actinomycete natural product gene clusters :
• Anti-fungal compounds
• ECO-02301 (Streptomyces aizunensis) – novel linear Type I PKS derived compound
• E-837 (Streptomyces aculeolatus) and E-492 & E-975 (Streptomyces sp Eco86) – novel alkenyl furanones (Type I PKS-derived)
Genome scanning – the Ecopia way
References
Zazopoulos E, Huang K, Staffa A, Liu W, Bachmann BO, Nonaka K, Ahlert J, Thorson JS, Shen B, Farnet CM. A genomics-guided approach for discovering and expressing cryptic metabolic pathways. Nat Biotechnol 21: 187–190 (2003)
McAlpine JB, Bachmann BO, Piraee M, Tremblay S, Alarco AM, Zazopoulos E, Farnet CM. Microbial genomics as a guide to drug discovery and structural elucidation: ECO-02301, a novel antifungal agent, as an example. J Nat Prod 68: 493–496 (2005)
Banskota AH, McAlpine JB, Sørensen D, Aouidate M, Piraee M, Alarco AM, Omura S, Shiomi K, Farnet CM, Zazopoulos E. Isolation and identification of three new 5-Alkenyl-3,3(2H)-furanones from two Streptomyces species using a genomic screening approach. J Antibiot 59: 168–176 (2006)
Banskota AH, Mcalpine JB, Sørensen D, Ibrahim A, Aouidate M, Piraee M, Alarco AM, Farnet CM, Zazopoulos E. Genomic analyses lead to novel secondary metabolites. Part 3. ECO-0501, a novel antibacterial of a new class. J Antibiot 59:533-42 (2006)
There is a very real and urgent need for new antibiotics
Metagenomics
New approaches are needed
High-throughput culturing
• Growth of previously uncultivated microorganisms under natural conditions
• Throughput of 5-10,000 isolated strains per month
• Yields novel strains AND novel biologically active molecules
• Provides material for the metagenomic approach
High throughput cultivation
• FACS-based technology
• Gel micro-droplet (GMD) encapsulation
• Screening rates of 5,000 GMDs/second
• Enables HTP isolation and cultivation of previously uncultured microorganisms
Screen for biological activity
High throughput cultivation
GMD with micro-colony
GMD withsingle cell
Free bacteria
Sorting of gel micro-droplets containing micro-colonies
Empty micro-droplets 5,000 GMDs/second
Model of the experimental setup
Cultivation of Sargasso Sea microbes
4 different types of media:
• Filtered sea water + rich marine medium (1/100)• Filtered sea water + amino acids• Filtered sea water + inorganic nutrients• Filtered sea water
4 DifferentMedia
• Encapsulated single cells in a GMD
• Grown for 5 weeks
• 1200 GMDs with micro-colonies FACS sorted into 96 well plates (marine medium)
• 16S rRNA gene library made by PCR; 140 clones characterised by RFLP
• 50 16S rRNA genes sequenced to determine nature of micro-colonies
Cultivation of Sargasso Sea microbes
Four different types of media, 50 16S rRNA gene sequences:
• Sea water + rich marine medium (1/100) 4 species:VibrioMarinobacterCytophaga
• Sea water + amino acids 12 species• Sea water + inorganic nutrients 11 species• Sea water 39 species
Rich marine medium
Filtered seawater
16 new clades
Zengler et al. (2002)PNAS 99:15681/6
Cultivation of Sargasso Sea microbes
More extensiveanalysis of 500 GMDs
Mining Biodiversity for New AntibioticsSupplementary Slides
There is a very real and urgent need for new antibiotics
Emergence of antibiotic resistantpathogens
Experts fear superbug pandemic1 April 2005
A strain of the MRSA superbug caught in public places as opposed to hospitals could spread faster and wider than first thought, experts say.
New superbug outbreak sweeps southern England 20 July 2005
An outbreak of a superbug resistant to antibiotics has infected more than 1,000 people and caused dozens of deaths. The bug, which can lead to blood poisoning, is spreading in southern England and is more serious than Clostridium difficile, which hit the headlines last month after a virulent strain infected 15 hospitals.
Superbug that moves faster than science 1 March 2005
The world may run out of effective antibiotics by the end of this decade and faces a gap of at least five years before new drugs can be developed to combat superbugs, according to one of the world's most influential scientists.
Superbug deaths up by nearly a quarterin year 24 February 2006
· NHS hospitals the most likely source of infection
The number of deaths related to MRSA, the so-called hospital superbug, increased by almost a quarter, according to the latest figures. MRSA is now six times more likely to be a factor in the deaths of people in NHS hospitals than anywhere else, the Office for National Statistics said yesterday.
Marine killed by scratch and superbug 24 May 2005
A SUPERFIT Royal Marine collapsed and died within days of scratching his leg on a bush while on a training run — victim of a mutated superbug one doctor described as the worst she had ever seen.
New strains of superbug can kill in 24 hours 20 February 2005
Highly virulent strains of the superbug MRSA which infect healthy young people with no connection to hospitals are appearing in the UK. The new varieties cause skin and soft tissue infections such as boils, abscesses and inflammation and, in rare cases so far only seen in other countries, a severe pneumonia that can kill in 24 hours.
'Superbug' infections spiralling in Canadian hospitals23 March 2005
Toronto - Hospitals are failing to control antibiotic-resistant "superbug" infections that kill as many as 8,000 patients each year and cost health-care systems at least $100 million annually, a CBC News investigation has learned.
Lethal superbug hits 44,000 elderly patients27 August 2005
Record numbers of elderly people fell victim last year to a potentially lethal superbug which is plaguing Britain's hospitals, according to details of the first complete survey of the disease. Concerns about the bug, Clostridium difficile, were first revealed in The Independent in June following an outbreak of a lethal strain at Stoke Mandeville Hospital. The figures yesterday showed that there were 44,488 cases of the bug among people over 65.
Hospital and Community Based Problem
Hospital-Acquired Infections
• Methicillin resistant Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA) – 37%• Vancomycin resistant Enterococci (VRE) – 65%• Vancomycin resistant Staphylococcus aureus (VISA and VRSA)• Cephalosporin resistant Gram-negative bacteria• Azole resistant Candida albicans
Community-Acquired Infections
• Penicillin resistant Streptococcus pneumoniae (PRSP) – 25%• Multidrug resistant S. pneumoniae• Multidrug resistant Salmonella, e.g.Salmonella DT104
(AmpR, CmlR, StrR, SulR, TmpR, TetR, KanR, CipR)• Multidrug resistant Shigella• Fluoroquinolone resistant gonococci• Multidrug resistant Mycobacterium tuberculosis X
• Infectious disease mortality • 1900 to1980: declined 20 fold• 1980 to1995: increased two fold
• Antibiotic resistance is the major contributor
Increasing incidence of antibiotic resistance
1980 1985 1990 1995 2000
60
50
40
30
20
10
0
% in
cide
nce
MRSA
VRE
• Few new antibiotics marketed in the last 40 years
• And yet large pharmaceutical companies are curtailing anti-infective research and antibiotic discovery programmes
• Why?
Declining numbers of new antibiotics entering the clinic
Demise of antibiotic discovery in the pharmaceutical industry
• Development of a new antibiotic is expensive and risky: how long will the antibiotic remain effective and will it be profitable?
• Competition from highly profitable drugs for chronic diseases (high blood pressure, cholesterol lowering agents, depression etc)
• Led to reduced investment in or elimination of many antibiotic drug discovery programs
• Discovery of new antibiotics from traditional sources (microbes) has become increasingly difficult - have they all been found already?
• No – but new and imaginative approaches are required to find them