Profiling the metabolic signals involved in chemical communication between microbes using imaging mass spectrometry
The ability of microbes to secrete bioactive chemical signals into their environment has been known for over a century. However, it is only in the last decade that imaging mass spectrometry has provided us with the ability to directly visualize the spatial distributions of these microbial metabolite...
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Veröffentlicht in: | FEMS microbiology reviews 2016-11, Vol.40 (6), p.807-813 |
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Format: | Artikel |
Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | The ability of microbes to secrete bioactive chemical signals into their environment has been known for over a century. However, it is only in the last decade that imaging mass spectrometry has provided us with the ability to directly visualize the spatial distributions of these microbial metabolites. This technology involves collecting mass spectra from multiple discrete locations across a biological sample, yielding chemical ‘maps’ that simultaneously reveal the distributions of hundreds of metabolites in two dimensions. Advances in microbial imaging mass spectrometry summarized here have included the identification of novel strain- or coculture-specific compounds, the visualization of biotransformation events (where one metabolite is converted into another by a neighboring microbe), and the implementation of a method to reconstruct the 3D subsurface distributions of metabolites, among others. Here we review the recent literature and discuss how imaging mass spectrometry has spurred novel insights regarding the chemical consequences of microbial interactions.
This review highlights recent advances in the applications of imaging mass spectrometry to assist in both identifying and directly visualizing the distributions of specialized metabolites in complex bacterial populations. |
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ISSN: | 1574-6976 0168-6445 1574-6976 |
DOI: | 10.1093/femsre/fuw032 |