Publication | Open Access
Growth of desferrioxamine-deficient<i>Streptomyces</i>mutants through xenosiderophore piracy of airborne fungal contaminations
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Citations
37
References
2015
Year
BiologyIndustrial MycologyFilamentous FungusMicrobial PhysiologyMicrobial EcologyFungal PhysiologyEnvironmental MicrobiologyEcotoxicologyMicrobiologyXenosiderophore PiracyHplc FractionsDesferrioxamine SiderophoresMedicineFungal BiologyAntimicrobial ResistanceFungal Pathogen
Due to the necessity of iron for housekeeping functions, nutrition, morphogenesis and secondary metabolite production, siderophore piracy could be a key strategy in soil and substrate colonization by microorganisms. Here we report that mutants of bacterium Streptomyces coelicolor unable to produce desferrioxamine siderophores could recover growth when the plates were contaminated by indoor air spores of a Penicillium species and Engyodontium album. UPLC-ESI-MS analysis revealed that the HPLC fractions with the extracellular 'resuscitation' factors of the Penicillium isolate were only those that contained siderophores, i.e. Fe-dimerum acid, ferrichrome, fusarinine C and coprogen. The restored growth of the Streptomyces mutants devoid of desferrioxamine is most likely mediated through xenosiderophore uptake as the cultivability depends on the gene encoding the ABC-transporter-associated DesE siderophore-binding protein. That a filamentous fungus allows the growth of desferrioxamine non-producing Streptomyces in cocultures confirms that xenosiderophore piracy plays a vital role in nutritional interactions between these taxonomically unrelated filamentous microorganisms.
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