Solanimycin: Biosynthesis and Distribution of a New Antifungal Antibiotic Regulated by Two Quorum-Sensing Systems

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  • Miguel A. Matilla
  • Rita E. Monson
  • Annabel Murphy
  • Schicketanz, Muriel Leandra
  • Alison Rawlinson
  • Caia Duncan
  • Juan Mata
  • Finian Leeper
  • George P. C. Salmond

The increasing emergence of drug-resistant fungal infections has necessitated a search for new compounds capable of combating fungal pathogens of plants, animals, and humans. Microorganisms represent the main source of antibiotics with applicability in agriculture and in the clinic, but many aspects of their metabolic potential remain to be explored. This report describes the discovery and characterization of a new antifungal compound, solanimycin, produced by a hybrid polyketide/nonribosomal peptide (PKS/NRPS) system in Dickeya solani, the enterobacterial pathogen of potato. Solanimycin was active against a broad range of plant-pathogenic fungi of global economic concern and the human pathogen Candida albicans. The genomic cluster responsible for solanimycin production was defined and analyzed to identify the corresponding biosynthetic proteins, which include four multimodular PKS/NRPS proteins and several tailoring enzymes. Antifungal production in D. solani was enhanced in response to experimental conditions found in infected potato tubers and high-density fungal cultures. Solanimycin biosynthesis was cell density dependent in D. solani and was controlled by both the ExpIR acyl-homoserine lactone and Vfm quorum-sensing systems of the bacterial phytopathogen. The expression of the solanimycin cluster was also regulated at the post-transcriptional level, with the regulator RsmA playing a major role. The solanimycin biosynthetic cluster was conserved across phylogenetically distant bacterial genera, and multiple pieces of evidence support that the corresponding gene clusters were acquired by horizontal gene transfer. Given its potent broad-range antifungal properties, this study suggests that solanimycin and related molecules may have potential utility for agricultural and clinical exploitation.

Original languageEnglish
JournalmBio
Volume13
Issue number6
Number of pages18
ISSN2150-7511
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 2022

    Research areas

  • Dickeya solani, acyl-homoserine lactone, agriculture and global food security, antibiotics, antifungal agents, gene regulation, horizontal gene transfer, hybrid polyketide, nonribosomal peptide, phytopathogens, post-transcriptional control mechanisms, quorum sensing, secondary metabolism, DICKEYA-SOLANI, NATURAL-PRODUCTS, SALMONELLA-TYPHIMURIUM, STRUCTURAL DIVERSITY, ERWINIA-CAROTOVORA, EMERGING FUNGAL, SOFT-ROT, VIRULENCE, PLANT, POTATO

ID: 322872811