Issue 16, 2018

From pirates and killers: does metabolite diversity drive bacterial competition?

Abstract

Bacteria engage in numerous collaborative and competitive interactions, which are often mediated by small molecule metabolites. Bacterial competition involves for example the production of compounds that effectively kill or inhibit growth of their neighbours but also the secretion of siderophores that allow securing the essential and fiercely embattled resource of ferric iron. Yet, the enormous diversity of metabolites produced has remained puzzling in many cases. We here present examples of both types of competition from our recent work. These include the human pathogen Pseudomonas aeruginosa producing HQNO derived 4-quinolone N-oxides varying in chain length and saturation as antibiotics against Staphylococcus aureus and two marine bacteria, Shewanella algae and Vibrio alginolyticus competing for iron acquisition via homodimeric and heterodimeric cyclic hydroxamate siderophores. In each case, bacteria not only produce one but a whole set of closely related metabolites encoded by a single biosynthetic gene cluster. Our recent work has demonstrated that individual metabolites can have significantly different biological activities and we speculate on the reasons for maintaining this metabolite diversity from the perspective of interspecies competition.

Graphical abstract: From pirates and killers: does metabolite diversity drive bacterial competition?

Article information

Article type
Perspective
Submitted
18 1 2018
Accepted
07 3 2018
First published
07 3 2018

Org. Biomol. Chem., 2018,16, 2814-2819

From pirates and killers: does metabolite diversity drive bacterial competition?

D. Szamosvári, S. Rütschlin and T. Böttcher, Org. Biomol. Chem., 2018, 16, 2814 DOI: 10.1039/C8OB00150B

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