학술논문

Small molecule in situ resin capture provides a compound first approach to natural product discovery
Document Type
Original Paper
Source
Nature Communications. 15(1)
Subject
Language
English
ISSN
2041-1723
Abstract
Culture-based microbial natural product discovery strategies fail to realize the extraordinary biosynthetic potential detected across earth’s microbiomes. Here we introduce Small Molecule In situ Resin Capture (SMIRC), a culture-independent method to obtain natural products directly from the environments in which they are produced. We use SMIRC to capture numerous compounds including two new carbon skeletons that were characterized using NMR and contain structural features that are, to the best of our knowledge, unprecedented among natural products. Applications across diverse marine habitats reveal biome-specific metabolomic signatures and levels of chemical diversity in concordance with sequence-based predictions. Expanded deployments, in situ cultivation, and metagenomics facilitate compound discovery, enhance yields, and link compounds to candidate producing organisms, although microbial community complexity creates challenges for the later. This compound-first approach to natural product discovery provides access to poorly explored chemical space and has implications for drug discovery and the detection of chemically mediated biotic interactions.
Environmental analyses predict extensive, yet to be realized natural product diversity. Herein, the authors report an approach that directly captures natural products from the environment, circumventing previous challenges and yielding compounds with unusual structures and activities.