RRC ID 66386
Author Hernández-Saldaña OF, Barboza-Corona JE, Bideshi DK, Casados-Vázquez LE.
Title New bacteriocin-like substances produced by Streptomyces species with activity against pathogens.
Journal Folia Microbiol (Praha)
Abstract Streptomyces spp. are Gram-positive bacteria well-known for their ability to produce antibiotics and other metabolites, but few studies on bacteriocins produced by these bacteria have been reported. We tested eight Streptomyces strains against different pathogenic bacteria, and selected S. griseus, S. nigrescens, S. bottroprensis, and S. violaceoruber for further study based on their inhibitory effects against bacteria, including human pathogens. S. bottropensis reached its highest activity at 312 h and was higher than the activities of S. violaceoruber and S. nigrescens. The best condition for bacteriocin precipitation was using diammonium sulfate at 50% saturation. Bacteriocins were susceptible to proteinase treatments and stable at high temperature (up to 100 °C). The highest inhibitory activities were observed between pH 5 and 6. Cross-activity assays indicated that each Streptomyces strain produced different bacteriocins. When preparations of S. griseus and S. nigrescens were subjected to SDS-PAGE, bands of inhibition were observed in the gel overlay assay at a position corresponding to ~ 2 and 3 kDa, respectively, suggesting that both strains are potential sources for novel bacteriocins.
Volume 65(4)
Pages 669-678
Published 2020-8-1
DOI 10.1007/s12223-020-00770-z
PII 10.1007/s12223-020-00770-z
PMID 31953748
MeSH Ammonium Sulfate / chemistry Anti-Bacterial Agents / isolation & purification Anti-Bacterial Agents / metabolism* Anti-Bacterial Agents / pharmacology Bacteriocins / genetics Bacteriocins / isolation & purification Bacteriocins / metabolism* Bacteriocins / pharmacology Humans Hydrogen-Ion Concentration Microbial Sensitivity Tests Protein Stability Species Specificity Streptomyces / classification Streptomyces / genetics Streptomyces / growth & development Streptomyces / metabolism* Temperature
Resource
General Microbes JCM2152