Marine Sediments Hold an Untapped Potential for Novel Taxonomic and Bioactive Bacterial Diversity
Pernille Kjersgaard Bech, Klaus Lars Lysdal, Lone Gram, Mikkel Bentzon‐Tilia, Mikael Lenz Strube
Abstract
Since bacterial resistance to antibiotics is developing worldwide, new antibiotics are needed. Most antibiotics discovered so far have been found in soil-dwelling bacteria, so we instead targeted marine environments as a novel source of bioactive potential. We used amplicon sequencing of bioactive gene clusters in the microbiome of coastal seawater and sandy sediments and found the bioactive potential to be comparable to, but distinct from, the bioactive potential of selected soil microbiomes. Moreover, most of this potential is not captured by culturing. Comparing the biosynthetic potential to the corresponding microbiome composition suggested that minor constituents of the microbiome likely hold a disproportionally large fraction of the biosynthesis potential.