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Visualizing Bacterial Interactions with Imaging Mass Spectrometry Could Lead to Better Antibiotics

By LabMedica International staff writers
Posted on 09 Dec 2009
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A recently devised method of imaging the chemical communication and combat between microorganisms could lead to new antibiotics, antifungal, antiviral, and anticancer drugs.

The method was described November 8, 2009, in the journal Nature Chemical Biology. The article explained a technique developed by a collaborative team that includes Dr. Paul Straight, AgriLife Research scientist in the department of biochemistry and biophysics at Texas A&M University (College Station, USA) Drs. Pieter Dorrestein, Yu-Liang Yang, and Yuquan Xu, all at the University of California, San Diego (USA).

"Microorganisms encode in their genomes the capacity to produce many small molecules that are potential new antibiotics,” Dr. Straight said. "Because we do not understand the circumstances under which those molecules are produced in the environment, we see only a small fraction of them in the laboratory.”

An example is the antibiotic erythromycin, which is frequently prescribed for people who are allergic to penicillin, according to Dr. Straight. "We know that Saccharopolyspora erythraea, the bacteria from which erythromycin is derived, encodes the capacity to produce numerous other small molecules that might be potentially valuable drugs,” he said. "Conventional microbial culture and drug discovery techniques uncovered erythromycin. Other potentially useful metabolites may require some unconventional methods for identification.”

Historically, medicinal drugs have been discovered serendipitously or by finding the active ingredient in homeopathic remedies, noted Dr. Straight. For example, the use of blue mold for treating wounds was a folk remedy dates back to the Middle Ages. However, scientists did not isolate and purify the active ingredient, penicillin, until the early 20th century, which marks the beginning of the era of ‘natural product' medicines originating from microorganisms.

Modern methods of drug discovery rely on screening technologies, knowledge of how infection is controlled, and why diseases originate at the molecular level. Some new drugs can be designed accordingly from scratch, often at significant cost, but serendipitous discovery of what nature has to offer is still a legitimate approach, according to Dr. Straight

Microorganisms, such as the bacteria that produce erythromycin, have been communicating and fighting with each other for millennia using similar small molecules. "What we learn about how microbes interact and exchange chemicals, and how the presence of one signaling molecule or antibiotic changes the output of potential antibiotics from a neighboring microbe, will guide us to new strategies for boosting the number of potential therapeutic drugs from any given bacteria,” Dr. Straight said.

The U.S. National Institutes of Health (Bethesda, MD, USA) recognizes the need to boost development of new drug compounds, Dr. Straight reported. "Globally, there is a shortage of new antibiotics that are being discovered by pharmaceutical companies in the traditional way and an ever-increasing number of multiple drug-resistant pathogens and newly emerging pathogens,” Dr. Straight said.

The method of Drs. Straight, Dorrestein, and colleagues employed an instrument called a matrix-assisted laser desorption/ionization mass spectrometer. The device ionizes part of the sample with a laser beam while a crystalline matrix prevents the biomolecules from being destroyed. The plate upon which the bio sample sits is moved during the scan, from which hundreds to thousands of spectra are collected. The information is then processed as a grid and rendered as false-color by computer, then overlaid on a visual image of the sample.

The investigators used two common bacteria that are cultured in the laboratory for their tests, Bacillus subtilis and Steptomyces coelicolor, both commonly found in soils. The bacteria were cultured together and their complex chemical interaction recorded using the mass spectrometer.

In competition for resources, the bacteria produced small molecules that alter antibiotic production from patterns present when cultured separately, according to Dr. Straight. For example, they found that production of an antibiotic that targets Gram-positive organisms (Streptococcus and Staphylococcus are examples of Gram-positive organisms) was inhibited in one bacterium by the other.

The data revealed the chemical complexity of interspecies encounters. Utilizing genetic sequencing, the researchers found that bacteria might dedicate up to 20% of their DNA to the biosynthesis of small molecules in their communications and chemical battles with other microorganisms.

Related Links:

AgriLife Research
Texas A&M University
University of California, San Diego


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