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The fungus-growing termite Macrotermes natalensis harbors bacillaene-producing Bacillus sp that inhibit potentially antagonistic fungi

Cited 106 time in Web of Science Cited 113 time in Scopus
Authors

Um, Soohyun; Fraimout, Antoine; Sapountzis, Panagiotis; Oh, Dong-Chan; Poulsen, Michael

Issue Date
2013-11
Publisher
Nature Publishing Group
Citation
Scientific Reports, Vol.3
Abstract
The ancient fungus-growing termite (Mactrotermitinae) symbiosis involves the obligate association between a lineage of higher termites and basidiomycete Termitomyces cultivar fungi. Our investigation of the fungus-growing termite Macrotermes natalensis shows that Bacillus strains from M. natalensis colonies produce a single major antibiotic, bacillaene A (1), which selectively inhibits known and putatively antagonistic fungi of Termitomyces. Comparative analyses of the genomes of symbiotic Bacillus strains revealed that they are phylogenetically closely related to Bacillus subtilis, their genomes have high homology with more than 90% of ORFs being 100% identical, and the sequence identities across the biosynthetic gene cluster for bacillaene are higher between termite-associated strains than to the cluster previously reported in B. subtilis. Our findings suggest that this lineage of antibiotic-producing Bacillus may be a defensive symbiont involved in the protection of the fungus-growing termite cultivar.
ISSN
2045-2322
URI
https://hdl.handle.net/10371/207553
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1038/srep03250
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  • College of Pharmacy
  • Department of Manufacturing Pharmacy
Research Area Chemical biology of natural products, Drug discovery from microbial natural products, Study of insect-microbial symbiosis, 미생물 유래 생리활성 천연물 발굴, 천연물 구조 분석

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