Discovery and Biosynthesis of Natural Products from New Zealand Soil Metagenome Libraries
Antibiotic discovery rates dramatically declined following the “golden age” of the 1940’s to the 1960’s. The platforms that underpinned that age of discovery rested upon laboratory cultivation of a small clade of bacteria, the actinomycetes, primarily isolated from soil environments. Fermentation extracts of these isolated bacteria have provided the majority of antibiotics and anticancer small molecules still used today. By applying modern genetic analysis techniques to these same environmental sources that have previously yielded such success, we can uncover new biosynthetic pathways, and bioactive compounds. The work described in this thesis investigated New Zealand soil metagenomes for this purpose. Four large metagenome libraries were constructed from the microbiomes of diverse soil environments. These were then interrogated by a functional screening approach in a knockout Escherichia coli strain, to recover a large collection of the biosynthetic gene clusters responsible for bacterial secondary metabolite production. Using different modes of bioinformatic analysis, these gene clusters were demonstrated to have both phylogenetic divergence, and functional difference from bacterial biosynthesis pathways previously discovered from culture based studies. Two additional biosynthetic pathways were recovered from one of these metagenome libraries, and in each case found to have novel genetic features. These gene clusters were further studied by heterologous expression within Streptomyces albus production hosts. One of these gene clusters produced small aromatic polyketide compounds, the structure of one of which was solved by chemical analytic techniques, and found to be a new chemical entity. The second gene cluster was demonstrated to have similarity to known aureolic acid biosynthesis gene clusters – a class of potent anticancer natural products. Heterologous expression resulted in the production of many metabolites, two of which were characterised and found to be new members of this chemical class. The research in this thesis both validates the use of metagenomic analysis for future natural product discovery efforts, and adds to a growing body of evidence that understudied clades of bacteria have an untapped biosynthetic potential that can be accessed by metagenomic methods.