Bioactive Natural Products Produced by Streptomyces from the Microbiome of Cadaveric Fly Larvae
Currie, C. R.; Akbar, S.; Salamzade, R.; Ryan, K. T.; Carlson, C. M.; Schaenzer, A. J.; Zamanian, M.; Kalan, L.; Bugni, T. S.
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Streptomyces are prolific producers of bioactive compounds and increasingly recognized as members of insect microbiomes, yet the microbiome of cadaveric fly larvae remain an overlooked system for discovering metabolically versatile Streptomyces species. Here, we conduct targeted bacterial isolations from the microbiome of fly larvae collected from pig cadavers, generating 42 Streptomyces isolates of interest, and systematically evaluated their metabolic potential through genomic analysis, antimicrobial screening, biosynthetic gene cluster assessment, untargeted LC-MS/MS metabolomics, and compound purification. The Streptomyces isolates spanned nine species, including underrepresented lineages for which we added genomic representatives. Streptomyces from carrion fly larvae exhibited broad-spectrum antimicrobial activity and substantial BGC diversity, supported by metabolomic detection of antimycins, surugamides, and macrotetrolides. From a deep phylogenetic lineage, we purified JBIR-68 and Simamycin and demonstrated their potent anthelmintic activity against Brugia malayi microfilariae. GNPS molecular networking revealed three additional JBIR-68 analogs, establishing the first taxonomically resolved Streptomyces lineage capable of producing these rare metabolites. Our findings position cadaveric fly larvae as a rich ecological reservoir for discovering Streptomyces with the potential to produce chemically diverse natural products with biomedical applications.
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