Discovery, biosynthesis, and bioactivities of peptidic natural products from marine sponges and sponge-associated bacteria
Abstract
Covering 2010 to 2025
Sponges are benthic, sessile invertebrate metazoans that are some of the most prolific sources of natural products in the marine environment. Sponge-derived natural products are often endowed with favorable pharmaceutical bioactivities, and paired with their structural complexity, have long served as title compounds for chemical syntheses. Sponges are holobionts, in that the sponge host is associated with symbiotic and commensal microbiome. Natural products isolated from sponges can be produced by the sponge host, or the associated microbiome. Recent genomic studies have shed light on the sponge eukaryotic host as the true producer of several classes of sponge-derived peptidic natural products. In this review spanning years 2010–2025, we describe peptidic natural products isolated from the sponge hosts and the associated microbiome, detail their biosynthetic processes where known, and offer forward looking insights into future innovation in discovery and biosynthesis of peptidic natural products from marine sponges.