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The Ubiquitous Soil Terpene Geosmin Acts as a Warning Chemical

Liana Zaroubi, Imge Ozugergin, Karina Mastronardi, Anic Imfeld, Chris Law, Yves Gélinas, Alisa Piekny, Brandon Findlay

2022Applied and Environmental Microbiology51 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

One of the key chemicals that give soil its earthy aroma, geosmin is a frequent water contaminant produced by a range of unrelated microbes. Many animals, including humans, are able to detect geosmin at minute concentrations, but the benefit that this compound provides to its producing organisms is poorly understood. We found that geosmin repelled the bacterial predator Caenorhabditis elegans in the absence of bacteria and reduced contact between the worms and the geosmin-producing bacterium Streptomyces coelicolor in a predation assay. While geosmin itself appears to be nontoxic to C. elegans, these bacteria make a wide range of toxic metabolites, and grazing on them harmed the worms. In this system, geosmin thus appears to indicate unpalatable bacteria, reducing predation and benefiting both predator and prey. Aposematic signals are well known in animals, and this work suggests that metabolites may play a similar role in the microbial world.

Topics & Concepts

GeosminBiologyPredationBacteriaMyxobacteriaMicrobiologyEcologyOdorGeneticsNeuroscienceBiocrusts and Microbial EcologyAlgal biology and biofuel productionOlfactory and Sensory Function Studies
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