Crowdsourcing natural products discovery to access uncharted dimensions of fungal metabolite diversity.

Angew Chem Int Ed Engl

Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry, Stephenson Life Sciences Research Center, University of Oklahoma, 101 Stephenson Parkway Norman, OK 73019-5251 (USA); Natural Products Discovery Group and Institute for Natural Products Applications and Research Technologies, University of Oklahoma (USA).

Published: January 2014


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Article Abstract

A fundamental component for success in drug discovery is the ability to assemble and screen compounds that encompass a broad swath of biologically relevant chemical-diversity space. Achieving this goal in a natural-products-based setting requires access to a wide range of biologically diverse specimens. For this reason, we introduced a crowdsourcing program in which citizen scientists furnish soil samples from which new microbial isolates are procured. Illustrating the strength of this approach, we obtained a unique fungal metabolite, maximiscin, from a crowdsourced Alaskan soil sample. Maximiscin, which exhibits a putative combination of polyketide synthase (PKS), non-ribosomal peptide synthetase (NRPS), and shikimate pathway components, was identified as an inhibitor of UACC-62 melanoma cells (LC50=0.93 μM). The metabolite also exhibited efficacy in a xenograft mouse model. These results underscore the value of building cooperative relationships between research teams and citizen scientists to enrich drug discovery efforts.

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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4028707PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/anie.201306549DOI Listing

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