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result(s) for
"Ling, Losee L."
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In situ cultivation of previously uncultivable microorganisms using the ichip
2017
This protocol details the construction and use of the ichip, a platform developed to isolate previously uncultivable microorganisms from a range of environmental samples, by enabling exposure to natural growth factors through
in situ
culture.
Most microbial species remain uncultivated, and modifying artificial nutrient media brings only an incremental increase in cultivability. We reasoned that an alternative way to cultivate species with unknown requirements is to use naturally occurring combinations of growth factors. To achieve this, we moved cultivation into the microbes' natural habitat by placing cells taken from varying environmental samples into diffusion chambers, which are then returned to nature for incubation. By miniaturizing the chambers and placing only one to several cells into each chamber, we can grow and isolate microorganisms in axenic culture in one step. We call this cultivation platform the 'isolation chip', or 'ichip'. This platform has been shown to increase microbial recovery from 5- to 300-fold, depending on the study. Furthermore, it provides access to a unique set of microbes that are inaccessible by standard cultivation. Here we provide a simple protocol for building and applying ichips for environmental cultivation of soil bacteria as an example; the protocol consists of (i) preparing the ichip; (ii) collecting an environmental sample; (iii) serially diluting cells and loading them into the ichip; (iv) returning the ichip to the environment for incubation; (v) retrieving the ichip and harvesting grown material; and (vi) domestication of the ichip-derived colonies for growth in the laboratory. The ichip's full assembly and deployment is a relatively simple procedure that, with experience, takes ∼2–3 h. After
in situ
incubation, retrieval of the ichip and processing of its contents will take ∼1–4 h, depending on which specific procedures are used.
Journal Article
A new antibiotic kills pathogens without detectable resistance
by
Cohen, Douglas R.
,
Zullo, Ashley M.
,
Epstein, Slava
in
631/154/349
,
631/154/555
,
631/326/22/1290
2015
Antibiotic resistance is spreading faster than the introduction of new compounds into clinical practice, causing a public health crisis. Most antibiotics were produced by screening soil microorganisms, but this limited resource of cultivable bacteria was overmined by the 1960s. Synthetic approaches to produce antibiotics have been unable to replace this platform. Uncultured bacteria make up approximately 99% of all species in external environments, and are an untapped source of new antibiotics. We developed several methods to grow uncultured organisms by cultivation
in situ
or by using specific growth factors. Here we report a new antibiotic that we term teixobactin, discovered in a screen of uncultured bacteria. Teixobactin inhibits cell wall synthesis by binding to a highly conserved motif of lipid II (precursor of peptidoglycan) and lipid III (precursor of cell wall teichoic acid). We did not obtain any mutants of
Staphylococcus aureus
or
Mycobacterium tuberculosis
resistant to teixobactin. The properties of this compound suggest a path towards developing antibiotics that are likely to avoid development of resistance.
From a new species of β-proteobacteria, an antibiotic called teixobactin that does not generate resistance has been characterized; the antibiotic has two different lipid targets in different bacterial cell wall synthesis components, which may explain why resistance was not observed.
Teixobactin, a robust dual-action antibiotic
Most antibiotics in clinical use were discovered by screening cultivable soil microorganisms, a much depleted resource that has not been adequately replaced by synthetic approaches. Hence the widespread alarm at the spread of antibiotic resistance. This paper presents some welcome good news, in the form of the isolation and characterization of a new antibiotic active against a range of bacterial pathogens including
Staphylococcus aureus
, and apparently untroubled by the evolution of resistance. Kim Lewis and colleagues use a recently developed system for
in situ
cultivation of previously uncultured soil bacteria and identify a β-proteobacterium,
Eleftheria terrae
sp. that produces a depsipeptide they call teixobactin. Teixobactin is active
in vivo
and separately targets precursors in the biosynthetic pathways for each of two major components of the bacterial cell wall, peptidoglycan and teichoic acid. Screens for mutants resistant teixobactin were negative, perhaps a consequence of this novel two-target mechanism.
Journal Article
Uncultured microorganisms as a source of secondary metabolites
2010
The vast majority of microbial species are ‘uncultured’ and do not grow under laboratory conditions. This has led to the development of a number of methods to culture these organisms in a simulated natural environment. Approaches include placing cells in chambers that allow diffusion of compounds from the natural environment, traps enclosed with porous membranes that specifically capture organisms forming hyphae—actinobacteria and microfungi, and growth in the presence of cultivable helper species. Repeated cultivation
in situ
produces domesticated variants that can grow on regular media
in vitro
, and can be scaled up for secondary metabolite production. The co-culture approach has led to the identification of the first class of growth factors for uncultured bacteria, iron-chelating siderophores. It appears that many uncultured organisms from diverse taxonomical groups have lost the ability to produce siderophores, and depend on neighboring species for growth. The new cultivation approaches allow for the exploitation of the secondary metabolite potential of the previously inaccessible microorganisms.
Journal Article
Teixobactin Provides Protection against Inhalation Anthrax in the Rabbit Model
by
Peterson, Johnny W.
,
Lawrence, William S.
,
Sivasubramani, Satheesh K.
in
adults
,
anthrax
,
antibiotic
2020
The use of antibiotics is a vital means of treating infections caused by the bacteria Bacillus (B.) anthracis. Importantly, with the potential future use of multidrug-resistant strains of B. anthracis as bioweapons, new antibiotics are needed as alternative therapeutics. In this blinded study, we assessed the protective efficacy of teixobactin, a recently discovered antibiotic, against inhalation anthrax infection in the adult rabbit model. New Zealand White rabbits were infected with a lethal dose of B. anthracis Ames spores via the inhalation route, and blood samples were collected at various times to assess antigenemia, bacteremia, tissue bacterial load, and antibody production. Treatments were administered upon detection of B. anthracis protective antigen in the animals’ sera. For comparison, a fully protective dose of levofloxacin was used as a positive control. Rabbits treated with teixobactin showed 100% survival following infection, and the bacteremia was completely resolved by 24–48 h post-treatment. In addition, the bacterial/spore loads in tissues of the animals treated with teixobactin were either zero or dramatically less relative to that of the negative control animals. Moreover, microscopic evaluation of the tissues revealed decreased pathology following treatment with teixobactin. Overall, these results show that teixobactin was protective against inhalation anthrax infection in the rabbit model, and they indicate the potential of teixobactin as a therapeutic for the disease.
Journal Article
Neocitreamicins I and II, Novel Antibiotics with Activity against Methicillin-Resistant Staphylococcus aureus and Vancomycin-Resistant Enterococci
by
ROTHFEDER Mithra T.
,
PEOPLES Aaron J.
,
MILLETT William P.
in
Anti-Bacterial Agents - chemistry
,
Anti-Bacterial Agents - isolation & purification
,
Anti-Bacterial Agents - pharmacology
2008
Two novel antibiotics, neocitreamicins I and II, were isolated from a fermentation broth of a
Nocardia
strain. This producing strain was obtained using an
in situ
diffusion chamber that facilitates the cultivation of soil microorganisms. The structures of neocitreamicins I and II were elucidated using UV, MS, and NMR data, and found to be related to the polycyclic xanthone antibiotics of the citreamicin class. The neocitreamicins showed
in vitro
activity against Gram-positive bacteria including strains of methicillin-resistant
Staphylococcus aureus
and vancomycin-resistant
Enterococcus faecalis
.
Journal Article
Erratum: A new antibiotic kills pathogens without detectable resistance
by
Cohen, Douglas R.
,
Zullo, Ashley M.
,
Epstein, Slava
in
631/154/349
,
631/154/556
,
631/326/22/1290
2015
Nature 517, 455–459 (2015); doi:10.1038/nature14098 In Fig. 3d of this Article, the ‘2:1’ and ‘1:1’ labels at the bottom of the panel were inadvertently switched during the production process; this figure has now been corrected in the online versions of the paper.
Journal Article
Teixobactin kills bacteria by a two-pronged attack on the cell envelope
2022
Antibiotics that use novel mechanisms are needed to combat antimicrobial resistance
1
–
3
. Teixobactin
4
represents a new class of antibiotics with a unique chemical scaffold and lack of detectable resistance. Teixobactin targets lipid II, a precursor of peptidoglycan
5
. Here we unravel the mechanism of teixobactin at the atomic level using a combination of solid-state NMR, microscopy, in vivo assays and molecular dynamics simulations. The unique enduracididine C-terminal headgroup of teixobactin specifically binds to the pyrophosphate-sugar moiety of lipid II, whereas the N terminus coordinates the pyrophosphate of another lipid II molecule. This configuration favours the formation of a β-sheet of teixobactins bound to the target, creating a supramolecular fibrillar structure. Specific binding to the conserved pyrophosphate-sugar moiety accounts for the lack of resistance to teixobactin
4
. The supramolecular structure compromises membrane integrity. Atomic force microscopy and molecular dynamics simulations show that the supramolecular structure displaces phospholipids, thinning the membrane. The long hydrophobic tails of lipid II concentrated within the supramolecular structure apparently contribute to membrane disruption. Teixobactin hijacks lipid II to help destroy the membrane. Known membrane-acting antibiotics also damage human cells, producing undesirable side effects. Teixobactin damages only membranes that contain lipid II, which is absent in eukaryotes, elegantly resolving the toxicity problem. The two-pronged action against cell wall synthesis and cytoplasmic membrane produces a highly effective compound targeting the bacterial cell envelope. Structural knowledge of the mechanism of teixobactin will enable the rational design of improved drug candidates.
Using a combination of methods, the mechanism of the antibiotic teixobactin is revealed.
Journal Article
In situ cultivation of previously uncultivable microorganisms using the ichip
2017
Most microbial species remain uncultivated, and modifying artificial nutrient media brings only an incremental increase in cultivability. We reasoned that an alternative way to cultivate species with unknown requirements is to use naturally occurring combinations of growth factors. To achieve this, we moved cultivation into the microbes' natural habitat by placing cells taken from varying environmental samples into diffusion chambers, which are then returned to nature for incubation. By miniaturizing the chambers and placing only one to several cells into each chamber, we can grow and isolate microorganisms in axenic culture in one step. We call this cultivation platform the 'isolation chip', or 'ichip'. This platform has been shown to increase microbial recovery from 5- to 300-fold, depending on the study. Furthermore, it provides access to a unique set of microbes that are inaccessible by standard cultivation. Here we provide a simple protocol for building and applying ichips for environmental cultivation of soil bacteria as an example; the protocol consists of (i) preparing the ichip; (ii) collecting an environmental sample; (iii) serially diluting cells and loading them into the ichip; (iv) returning the ichip to the environment for incubation; (v) retrieving the ichip and harvesting grown material; and (vi) domestication of the ichip-derived colonies for growth in the laboratory. The ichip's full assembly and deployment is a relatively simple procedure that, with experience, takes [similar]2-3 h. After in situ incubation, retrieval of the ichip and processing of its contents will take [similar]1-4 h, depending on which specific procedures are used.
Journal Article