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Adding Zooplankton to the OSMAC Toolkit: Effect of Grazing Stress on the Metabolic Profile and Bioactivity of a Diatom

“One strain many compounds” (OSMAC) based approaches have been widely used in the search for bioactive compounds. Introducing stress factors like nutrient limitation, UV-light or cocultivation with competing organisms has successfully been used in prokaryote cultivation. It is known that diatom phys...

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Autores principales: Osvik, Renate Døving, Ingebrigtsen, Richard Andre, Norrbin, Maria Fredrika, Andersen, Jeanette Hammer, Eilertsen, Hans Christian, Hansen, Espen Holst
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: MDPI 2021
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7913365/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/33546196
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/md19020087
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author Osvik, Renate Døving
Ingebrigtsen, Richard Andre
Norrbin, Maria Fredrika
Andersen, Jeanette Hammer
Eilertsen, Hans Christian
Hansen, Espen Holst
author_facet Osvik, Renate Døving
Ingebrigtsen, Richard Andre
Norrbin, Maria Fredrika
Andersen, Jeanette Hammer
Eilertsen, Hans Christian
Hansen, Espen Holst
author_sort Osvik, Renate Døving
collection PubMed
description “One strain many compounds” (OSMAC) based approaches have been widely used in the search for bioactive compounds. Introducing stress factors like nutrient limitation, UV-light or cocultivation with competing organisms has successfully been used in prokaryote cultivation. It is known that diatom physiology is affected by changed cultivation conditions such as temperature, nutrient concentration and light conditions. Cocultivation, though, is less explored. Hence, we wanted to investigate whether grazing pressure can affect the metabolome of the marine diatom Porosira glacialis, and if the stress reaction could be detected as changes in bioactivity. P. glacialis cultures were mass cultivated in large volume bioreactor (6000 L), first as a monoculture and then as a coculture with live zooplankton. Extracts of the diatom biomass were screened in a selection of bioactivity assays: inhibition of biofilm formation, antibacterial and cell viability assay on human cells. Bioactivity was found in all bioassays performed. The viability assay towards normal lung fibroblasts revealed that P. glacialis had higher bioactivity when cocultivated with zooplankton than in monoculture. Cocultivation with diatoms had no noticeable effect on the activity against biofilm formation or bacterial growth. The metabolic profiles were analyzed showing the differences in diatom metabolomes between the two culture conditions. The experiment demonstrates that grazing stress affects the biochemistry of P. glacialis and thus represents a potential tool in the OSMAC toolkit.
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spelling pubmed-79133652021-02-28 Adding Zooplankton to the OSMAC Toolkit: Effect of Grazing Stress on the Metabolic Profile and Bioactivity of a Diatom Osvik, Renate Døving Ingebrigtsen, Richard Andre Norrbin, Maria Fredrika Andersen, Jeanette Hammer Eilertsen, Hans Christian Hansen, Espen Holst Mar Drugs Article “One strain many compounds” (OSMAC) based approaches have been widely used in the search for bioactive compounds. Introducing stress factors like nutrient limitation, UV-light or cocultivation with competing organisms has successfully been used in prokaryote cultivation. It is known that diatom physiology is affected by changed cultivation conditions such as temperature, nutrient concentration and light conditions. Cocultivation, though, is less explored. Hence, we wanted to investigate whether grazing pressure can affect the metabolome of the marine diatom Porosira glacialis, and if the stress reaction could be detected as changes in bioactivity. P. glacialis cultures were mass cultivated in large volume bioreactor (6000 L), first as a monoculture and then as a coculture with live zooplankton. Extracts of the diatom biomass were screened in a selection of bioactivity assays: inhibition of biofilm formation, antibacterial and cell viability assay on human cells. Bioactivity was found in all bioassays performed. The viability assay towards normal lung fibroblasts revealed that P. glacialis had higher bioactivity when cocultivated with zooplankton than in monoculture. Cocultivation with diatoms had no noticeable effect on the activity against biofilm formation or bacterial growth. The metabolic profiles were analyzed showing the differences in diatom metabolomes between the two culture conditions. The experiment demonstrates that grazing stress affects the biochemistry of P. glacialis and thus represents a potential tool in the OSMAC toolkit. MDPI 2021-02-03 /pmc/articles/PMC7913365/ /pubmed/33546196 http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/md19020087 Text en © 2021 by the authors. Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
spellingShingle Article
Osvik, Renate Døving
Ingebrigtsen, Richard Andre
Norrbin, Maria Fredrika
Andersen, Jeanette Hammer
Eilertsen, Hans Christian
Hansen, Espen Holst
Adding Zooplankton to the OSMAC Toolkit: Effect of Grazing Stress on the Metabolic Profile and Bioactivity of a Diatom
title Adding Zooplankton to the OSMAC Toolkit: Effect of Grazing Stress on the Metabolic Profile and Bioactivity of a Diatom
title_full Adding Zooplankton to the OSMAC Toolkit: Effect of Grazing Stress on the Metabolic Profile and Bioactivity of a Diatom
title_fullStr Adding Zooplankton to the OSMAC Toolkit: Effect of Grazing Stress on the Metabolic Profile and Bioactivity of a Diatom
title_full_unstemmed Adding Zooplankton to the OSMAC Toolkit: Effect of Grazing Stress on the Metabolic Profile and Bioactivity of a Diatom
title_short Adding Zooplankton to the OSMAC Toolkit: Effect of Grazing Stress on the Metabolic Profile and Bioactivity of a Diatom
title_sort adding zooplankton to the osmac toolkit: effect of grazing stress on the metabolic profile and bioactivity of a diatom
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7913365/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/33546196
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/md19020087
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