antifungal activity of microbial secondary metabolites抗真菌活性的微生物次级代谢产物.pdf
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Antifungal Activity of Microbial Secondary Metabolites
Jeffrey J. Coleman., Suman Ghosh.¤, Ikechukwu Okoli, Eleftherios Mylonakis*
Harvard Medical School, Division of Infectious Diseases, Massachusetts General Hospital, Boston, Massachusetts, United States of America
Abstract
Secondary metabolites are well known for their ability to impede other microorganisms. Reanalysis of a screen of natural
products using the Caenorhabditis elegans-Candida albicans infection model identified twelve microbial secondary
metabolites capable of conferring an increase in survival to infected nematodes. In this screen, the two compound
treatments conferring the highest survival rates were members of the epipolythiodioxopiperazine (ETP) family of fungal
secondary metabolites, acetylgliotoxin and a derivative of hyalodendrin. The abundance of fungal secondary metabolites
indentified in this screen prompted further studies investigating the interaction between opportunistic pathogenic fungi
and Aspergillus fumigatus, because of the ability of the fungus to produce a plethora of secondary metabolites, including the
well studied ETP gliotoxin. We found that cell-free supernatant of A. fumigatus was able to inhibit the growth of Candida
albicans through the production of a secreted product. Comparative studies between a wild-type and an A. fumigatus DgliP
strain unable to synthesize gliotoxin demonstrate that this secondary metabolite is the major factor responsible for the
inhibition. Although toxic to organisms, gliotoxin conferred an increase in survival to C. albicans-infected C. elegans in a dose
dependent manner. As A. fumigatus produces gliotoxin in vivo, we propose that in addition to being a virulence factor,
gliotoxin may also provide an advantage to A. fumigatus when
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