Streptomyces as symbionts: an emerging and widespread theme?

Abstract Streptomyces bacteria are ubiquitous in soil, conferring the characteristic earthy smell, and they have an important ecological role in the turnover of organic material. More recently, a new picture has begun to emerge in which streptomycetes are not in all cases simply free-living soil bac...

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Veröffentlicht in:FEMS microbiology reviews 2012-07, Vol.36 (4), p.862-876
Hauptverfasser: Seipke, Ryan F., Kaltenpoth, Martin, Hutchings, Matthew I.
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Kaltenpoth, Martin
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description Abstract Streptomyces bacteria are ubiquitous in soil, conferring the characteristic earthy smell, and they have an important ecological role in the turnover of organic material. More recently, a new picture has begun to emerge in which streptomycetes are not in all cases simply free-living soil bacteria but have also evolved to live in symbiosis with plants, fungi and animals. Furthermore, much of the chemical diversity of secondary metabolites produced by Streptomyces species has most likely evolved as a direct result of their interactions with other organisms. Here we review what is currently known about the role of streptomycetes as symbionts with fungi, plants and animals. These interactions can be parasitic, as is the case for scab-causing streptomycetes, which infect plants, and the Streptomyces species Streptomyces somaliensis and Streptomyces sudanensis that infect humans. However, in most cases they are beneficial and growth promoting, as is the case with many insects, plants and marine animals that use streptomycete-produced antibiotics to protect themselves against infection. This is an exciting and newly emerging field of research that will become increasingly important as the search for new antibiotics switches to unusual and under-explored environments. Streptomyces bacteria are not simply free-living soil bacteria but have also evolved to live in symbiosis with plants, fungi and animals.
doi_str_mv 10.1111/j.1574-6976.2011.00313.x
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More recently, a new picture has begun to emerge in which streptomycetes are not in all cases simply free-living soil bacteria but have also evolved to live in symbiosis with plants, fungi and animals. Furthermore, much of the chemical diversity of secondary metabolites produced by Streptomyces species has most likely evolved as a direct result of their interactions with other organisms. Here we review what is currently known about the role of streptomycetes as symbionts with fungi, plants and animals. These interactions can be parasitic, as is the case for scab-causing streptomycetes, which infect plants, and the Streptomyces species Streptomyces somaliensis and Streptomyces sudanensis that infect humans. However, in most cases they are beneficial and growth promoting, as is the case with many insects, plants and marine animals that use streptomycete-produced antibiotics to protect themselves against infection. This is an exciting and newly emerging field of research that will become increasingly important as the search for new antibiotics switches to unusual and under-explored environments. Streptomyces bacteria are not simply free-living soil bacteria but have also evolved to live in symbiosis with plants, fungi and animals.</abstract><cop>Oxford, UK</cop><pub>Blackwell Publishing Ltd</pub><pmid>22091965</pmid><doi>10.1111/j.1574-6976.2011.00313.x</doi><tpages>15</tpages></addata></record>
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subjects actinobacteria
Animals
Antibiotics
Bacteria
Bacteriology
Biological and medical sciences
Biological evolution
Fundamental and applied biological sciences. Psychology
Fungi
Fungi - physiology
Insects
Marine animals
Marine organisms
Marine plants
Metabolites
Microbiology
Miscellaneous
Organic chemistry
Plant Diseases - microbiology
Plant Physiological Phenomena
Plant protection
Plants - microbiology
Scab
Secondary metabolites
Smell
Soil bacteria
Soil microorganisms
Soils
Streptomyces
Streptomyces - physiology
Streptomycetes
Switches
Symbionts
Symbiosis
title Streptomyces as symbionts: an emerging and widespread theme?
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