Marine cyanobacteria are source of bioactive natural compounds with a wide range of biotechnological applications. However, information on sponge-associated cyanobacteria are relatively scarce to date. In this paper, we carried out morphological and molecular characterization of eight cyanobacterial strains, previously isolated from the Mediterranean sponge Petrosia ficiformis, and evaluated their biological activities on epithelial- and neuron-like cultured cells of human and murine origin. The new analysis allowed maintaining the assignment of three strains (Cyanobium sp., Leptolyngbya ectocarpi, and Synechococcus sp.), while two strains previously identified as Synechococcus sp. and Leptolyngbya sp. were assigned to Pseudanabaena spp.. One strain, i.e. ITAC104, and the ITAC101 strain corresponding to Halomicronema metazoicum, shared extremely high sequence identity, practically representing two clones of the same species. Finally, for one strain, i.e. ITAC105, assignment to Phormidium sp. was possible. Concerning bioactivity analyses, incubation of cyanobacterial extracts induced variable responses in cultured cells, depending on cell type, with some of the cyanobacterial strains showing toxic activity on human epithelial-like cells and no toxic effects on human and rat neuron-like cells. Future investigations will allow to better define the bioactive properties of these cyanobacteria strains and to understand if they can be useful for (a) therapeutic purpose(s).

The marine sponge Petrosia ficiformis harbours different cyanobacteria strains with potential biotechnological application.

Caroppo C
2020

Abstract

Marine cyanobacteria are source of bioactive natural compounds with a wide range of biotechnological applications. However, information on sponge-associated cyanobacteria are relatively scarce to date. In this paper, we carried out morphological and molecular characterization of eight cyanobacterial strains, previously isolated from the Mediterranean sponge Petrosia ficiformis, and evaluated their biological activities on epithelial- and neuron-like cultured cells of human and murine origin. The new analysis allowed maintaining the assignment of three strains (Cyanobium sp., Leptolyngbya ectocarpi, and Synechococcus sp.), while two strains previously identified as Synechococcus sp. and Leptolyngbya sp. were assigned to Pseudanabaena spp.. One strain, i.e. ITAC104, and the ITAC101 strain corresponding to Halomicronema metazoicum, shared extremely high sequence identity, practically representing two clones of the same species. Finally, for one strain, i.e. ITAC105, assignment to Phormidium sp. was possible. Concerning bioactivity analyses, incubation of cyanobacterial extracts induced variable responses in cultured cells, depending on cell type, with some of the cyanobacterial strains showing toxic activity on human epithelial-like cells and no toxic effects on human and rat neuron-like cells. Future investigations will allow to better define the bioactive properties of these cyanobacteria strains and to understand if they can be useful for (a) therapeutic purpose(s).
2020
Istituto di Ricerca Sulle Acque - IRSA
taxonomy
Cyanobacteria
bioactivity
extracts
mammalian cell lines
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.14243/384817
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