Issue 11, 2021

Needles in haystacks: reevaluating old paradigms for the discovery of bacterial secondary metabolites

Abstract

Covering: up to 2021

Natural products research is in the midst of a renaissance ushered in by a modern understanding of microbiology and the technological explosions of genomics and metabolomics. As the exploration of uncharted chemical space expands into high-throughput discovery campaigns, it has become increasingly clear how design elements influence success: (bio)geography, habitat, community dynamics, culturing/induction methods, screening methods, dereplication, and more. We explore critical considerations and assumptions in natural products discovery. We revisit previous estimates of chemical rediscovery and discuss their relatedness to study design and producer taxonomy. Through frequency analyses of biosynthetic gene clusters in publicly available genomic data, we highlight phylogenetic biases that influence rediscovery rates. Through selected examples of how study design at each level determines discovery outcomes, we discuss the challenges and opportunities for the future of high-throughput natural product discovery.

Graphical abstract: Needles in haystacks: reevaluating old paradigms for the discovery of bacterial secondary metabolites

Article information

Article type
Review Article
Submitted
29 Jun 2021
First published
25 Oct 2021
This article is Open Access
Creative Commons BY-NC license

Nat. Prod. Rep., 2021,38, 2083-2099

Needles in haystacks: reevaluating old paradigms for the discovery of bacterial secondary metabolites

M. G. Chevrette and J. Handelsman, Nat. Prod. Rep., 2021, 38, 2083 DOI: 10.1039/D1NP00044F

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