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Dive into the research topics where Bradley S. Moore is active.

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Featured researches published by Bradley S. Moore.


Natural Product Reports | 2013

Ribosomally synthesized and post-translationally modified peptide natural products: overview and recommendations for a universal nomenclature

Paul G. Arnison; Mervyn J. Bibb; Gabriele Bierbaum; Albert A. Bowers; Tim S. Bugni; Grzegorz Bulaj; Julio A. Camarero; Dominic J. Campopiano; Gregory L. Challis; Jon Clardy; Paul D. Cotter; David J. Craik; Michael J. Dawson; Elke Dittmann; Stefano Donadio; Pieter C. Dorrestein; Karl Dieter Entian; Michael A. Fischbach; John S. Garavelli; Ulf Göransson; Christian W. Gruber; Daniel H. Haft; Thomas K. Hemscheidt; Christian Hertweck; Colin Hill; Alexander R. Horswill; Marcel Jaspars; Wendy L. Kelly; Judith P. Klinman; Oscar P. Kuipers

This review presents recommended nomenclature for the biosynthesis of ribosomally synthesized and post-translationally modified peptides (RiPPs), a rapidly growing class of natural products. The current knowledge regarding the biosynthesis of the >20 distinct compound classes is also reviewed, and commonalities are discussed.


Applied and Environmental Microbiology | 2002

Molecular Evidence for a Uniform Microbial Community in Sponges from Different Oceans

Ute Hentschel; Jörn N. Hopke; Matthias Horn; Anja B. Friedrich; Michael Wagner; Jörg Hacker; Bradley S. Moore

ABSTRACT Sponges (class Porifera) are evolutionarily ancient metazoans that populate the tropical oceans in great abundances but also occur in temperate regions and even in freshwater. Sponges contain large numbers of bacteria that are embedded within the animal matrix. The phylogeny of these bacteria and the evolutionary age of the interaction are virtually unknown. In order to provide insights into the species richness of the microbial community of sponges, we performed a comprehensive diversity survey based on 190 sponge-derived 16S ribosomal DNA (rDNA) sequences. The sponges Aplysina aerophoba and Theonella swinhoei were chosen for construction of the bacterial 16S rDNA library because they are taxonomically distantly related and they populate nonoverlapping geographic regions. In both sponges, a uniform microbial community was discovered whose phylogenetic signature is distinctly different from that of marine plankton or marine sediments. Altogether 14 monophyletic, sponge-specific sequence clusters were identified that belong to at least seven different bacterial divisions. By definition, the sequences of each cluster are more closely related to each other than to a sequence from nonsponge sources. These monophyletic clusters comprise 70% of all publicly available sponge-derived 16S rDNA sequences, reflecting the generality of the observed phenomenon. This shared microbial fraction represents the smallest common denominator of the sponges investigated in this study. Bacteria that are exclusively found in certain host species or that occur only transiently would have been missed. A picture emerges where sponges can be viewed as highly concentrated reservoirs of so far uncultured and elusive marine microorganisms.


Natural Product Reports | 2009

Genomic basis for natural product biosynthetic diversity in the actinomycetes

Markus Nett; Haruo Ikeda; Bradley S. Moore

The phylum Actinobacteria hosts diverse high G + C, Gram-positive bacteria that have evolved a complex chemical language of natural product chemistry to help navigate their fascinatingly varied lifestyles. To date, 71 Actinobacteria genomes have been completed and annotated, with the vast majority representing the Actinomycetales, which are the source of numerous antibiotics and other drugs from genera such as Streptomyces, Saccharopolyspora and Salinispora. These genomic analyses have illuminated the secondary metabolic proficiency of these microbes – underappreciated for years based on conventional isolation programs – and have helped set the foundation for a new natural product discovery paradigm based on genome mining. Trends in the secondary metabolomes of natural product-rich actinomycetes are highlighted in this review article, which contains 199 references.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2007

Genome sequencing reveals complex secondary metabolome in the marine actinomycete Salinispora tropica.

Daniel W. Udwary; Lisa Zeigler; Ratnakar N. Asolkar; Vasanth Singan; Alla Lapidus; William Fenical; Paul R. Jensen; Bradley S. Moore

Recent fermentation studies have identified actinomycetes of the marine-dwelling genus Salinispora as prolific natural product producers. To further evaluate their biosynthetic potential, we sequenced the 5,183,331-bp S. tropica CNB-440 circular genome and analyzed all identifiable secondary natural product gene clusters. Our analysis shows that S. tropica dedicates a large percentage of its genome (≈9.9%) to natural product assembly, which is greater than previous Streptomyces genome sequences as well as other natural product-producing actinomycetes. The S. tropica genome features polyketide synthase systems of every known formally classified family, nonribosomal peptide synthetases, and several hybrid clusters. Although a few clusters appear to encode molecules previously identified in Streptomyces species, the majority of the 17 biosynthetic loci are novel. Specific chemical information about putative and observed natural product molecules is presented and discussed. In addition, our bioinformatic analysis not only was critical for the structure elucidation of the polyene macrolactam salinilactam A, but its structural analysis aided the genome assembly of the highly repetitive slm loci. This study firmly establishes the genus Salinispora as a rich source of drug-like molecules and importantly reveals the powerful interplay between genomic analysis and traditional natural product isolation studies.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2012

Mass spectral molecular networking of living microbial colonies

Jeramie D. Watrous; Patrick J. Roach; Theodore Alexandrov; Brandi S. Heath; Jane Y. Yang; Roland Kersten; Menno van der Voort; Kit Pogliano; Harald Gross; Jos M. Raaijmakers; Bradley S. Moore; Julia Laskin; Nuno Bandeira; Pieter C. Dorrestein

Integrating the governing chemistry with the genomics and phenotypes of microbial colonies has been a “holy grail” in microbiology. This work describes a highly sensitive, broadly applicable, and cost-effective approach that allows metabolic profiling of live microbial colonies directly from a Petri dish without any sample preparation. Nanospray desorption electrospray ionization mass spectrometry (MS), combined with alignment of MS data and molecular networking, enabled monitoring of metabolite production from live microbial colonies from diverse bacterial genera, including Bacillus subtilis, Streptomyces coelicolor, Mycobacterium smegmatis, and Pseudomonas aeruginosa. This work demonstrates that, by using these tools to visualize small molecular changes within bacterial interactions, insights can be gained into bacterial developmental processes as a result of the improved organization of MS/MS data. To validate this experimental platform, metabolic profiling was performed on Pseudomonas sp. SH-C52, which protects sugar beet plants from infections by specific soil-borne fungi [R. Mendes et al. (2011) Science 332:1097–1100]. The antifungal effect of strain SH-C52 was attributed to thanamycin, a predicted lipopeptide encoded by a nonribosomal peptide synthetase gene cluster. Our technology, in combination with our recently developed peptidogenomics strategy, enabled the detection and partial characterization of thanamycin and showed that it is a monochlorinated lipopeptide that belongs to the syringomycin family of antifungal agents. In conclusion, the platform presented here provides a significant advancement in our ability to understand the spatiotemporal dynamics of metabolite production in live microbial colonies and communities.


Nature Chemical Biology | 2011

A mass spectrometry-guided genome mining approach for natural product peptidogenomics

Roland Kersten; Yu-Liang Yang; Yuquan Xu; Peter Cimermancic; Sang-Jip Nam; William Fenical; Michael A. Fischbach; Bradley S. Moore; Pieter C. Dorrestein

Peptide natural products exhibit broad biological properties and are commonly produced by orthogonal ribosomal and nonribosomal pathways in prokaryotes and eukaryotes. To harvest this large and diverse resource of bioactive molecules, we introduce Natural Product Peptidogenomics (NPP), a new mass spectrometry-guided genome mining method that connects the chemotypes of peptide natural products to their biosynthetic gene clusters by iteratively matching de novo MSn structures to genomics-based structures following current biosynthetic logic. In this study we demonstrate that NPP enabled the rapid characterization of >10 chemically diverse ribosomal and nonribosomal peptide natural products of novel composition from streptomycete bacteria as a proof of concept to begin automating the genome mining process. We show the identification of lantipeptides, lasso peptides, linardins, formylated peptides and lipopeptides, many of which from well-characterized model streptomycetes, highlighting the power of NPP in the discovery of new peptide natural products from even intensely studied organisms.


Natural Product Reports | 2002

Biosynthesis and attachment of novel bacterial polyketide synthase starter units

Bradley S. Moore; Christian Hertweck

The biosynthesis and mode of attachment of a wide range of polyketide synthase (PKS) starter units in bacteria are covered in this review. Natural, unnatural, and engineered starter units associated with type I and type II PKSs are reported. The literature through early 2001 is reviewed, and 240 references cited.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2014

Direct cloning and refactoring of a silent lipopeptide biosynthetic gene cluster yields the antibiotic taromycin A.

Kazuya Yamanaka; Kirk A. Reynolds; Roland D. Kersten; Katherine S. Ryan; David J. Gonzalez; Victor Nizet; Pieter C. Dorrestein; Bradley S. Moore

Significance Microbes have the genetic capacity to produce large numbers of specialized compounds, yet produce only a small fraction of these in the laboratory. Here we introduce a genetic platform that allows the efficient production of natural product molecules from uncharacterized gene collections. We used transformation-associated recombination in yeast to directly clone and express an orphan biosynthetic gene cluster for the production of the lipopeptide antibiotic taromycin A. With this direct cloning approach, a single genomic capture and expression vector was designed directly from next-generation sequencing data, which precisely captures genetic loci of interest and readily facilitates genetic manipulations. This study highlights a “plug-and-play” approach to cryptic biosynthetic pathways for the discovery and development of natural product drug candidates. Recent developments in next-generation sequencing technologies have brought recognition of microbial genomes as a rich resource for novel natural product discovery. However, owing to the scarcity of efficient procedures to connect genes to molecules, only a small fraction of secondary metabolomes have been investigated to date. Transformation-associated recombination (TAR) cloning takes advantage of the natural in vivo homologous recombination of Saccharomyces cerevisiae to directly capture large genomic loci. Here we report a TAR-based genetic platform that allows us to directly clone, refactor, and heterologously express a silent biosynthetic pathway to yield a new antibiotic. With this method, which involves regulatory gene remodeling, we successfully expressed a 67-kb nonribosomal peptide synthetase biosynthetic gene cluster from the marine actinomycete Saccharomonospora sp. CNQ-490 and produced the dichlorinated lipopeptide antibiotic taromycin A in the model expression host Streptomyces coelicolor. The taromycin gene cluster (tar) is highly similar to the clinically approved antibiotic daptomycin from Streptomyces roseosporus, but has notable structural differences in three amino acid residues and the lipid side chain. With the activation of the tar gene cluster and production of taromycin A, this study highlights a unique “plug-and-play” approach to efficiently gaining access to orphan pathways that may open avenues for novel natural product discoveries and drug development.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2013

MS/MS networking guided analysis of molecule and gene cluster families

Don D. Nguyen; Cheng-Hsuan Wu; Wilna J. Moree; Anne Lamsa; Marnix H. Medema; X. Zhao; Ronnie G. Gavilán; Marystella Aparicio; Librada Atencio; Chanaye Jackson; Javier Ballesteros; Joel Sanchez; Jeramie D. Watrous; Vanessa V. Phelan; Corine van de Wiel; Roland D. Kersten; Samina Mehnaz; René De Mot; Elizabeth A. Shank; Pep Charusanti; Harish Nagarajan; Brendan M. Duggan; Bradley S. Moore; Nuno Bandeira; Bernhard O. Palsson; Kit Pogliano; Marcelino Gutiérrez; Pieter C. Dorrestein

Significance The paper introduces the concepts of molecular families (MFs) and gene cluster families (GCFs). We define MFs as structurally related molecules based on their mass spectral fragmentation patterns, whereas GCFs are biosynthetic gene clusters that show similar gene cluster organization with a high degree of sequence similarity. We use MS/MS networking as a tool to map the molecular network of more than 60 organisms, most of which are unsequenced, and locate their nonribosomal peptide MFs. These MFs from unsequenced organisms are then connected to GCFs of publicly available genome sequences of closely related organisms. The ability to correlate the production of specialized metabolites to the genetic capacity of the organism that produces such molecules has become an invaluable tool in aiding the discovery of biotechnologically applicable molecules. Here, we accomplish this task by matching molecular families with gene cluster families, making these correlations to 60 microbes at one time instead of connecting one molecule to one organism at a time, such as how it is traditionally done. We can correlate these families through the use of nanospray desorption electrospray ionization MS/MS, an ambient pressure MS technique, in conjunction with MS/MS networking and peptidogenomics. We matched the molecular families of peptide natural products produced by 42 bacilli and 18 pseudomonads through the generation of amino acid sequence tags from MS/MS data of specific clusters found in the MS/MS network. These sequence tags were then linked to biosynthetic gene clusters in publicly accessible genomes, providing us with the ability to link particular molecules with the genes that produced them. As an example of its use, this approach was applied to two unsequenced Pseudoalteromonas species, leading to the discovery of the gene cluster for a molecular family, the bromoalterochromides, in the previously sequenced strain P. piscicida JCM 20779T. The approach itself is not limited to 60 related strains, because spectral networking can be readily adopted to look at molecular family–gene cluster families of hundreds or more diverse organisms in one single MS/MS network.


The ISME Journal | 2009

Genomic islands link secondary metabolism to functional adaptation in marine Actinobacteria

Kevin Penn; Caroline Jenkins; Markus Nett; Daniel W. Udwary; Erin A. Gontang; Ryan P. McGlinchey; Brian Foster; Alla Lapidus; Sheila Podell; Eric E. Allen; Bradley S. Moore; Paul R. Jensen

Genomic islands have been shown to harbor functional traits that differentiate ecologically distinct populations of environmental bacteria. A comparative analysis of the complete genome sequences of the marine Actinobacteria Salinispora tropica and Salinispora arenicola reveals that 75% of the species-specific genes are located in 21 genomic islands. These islands are enriched in genes associated with secondary metabolite biosynthesis providing evidence that secondary metabolism is linked to functional adaptation. Secondary metabolism accounts for 8.8% and 10.9% of the genes in the S. tropica and S. arenicola genomes, respectively, and represents the major functional category of annotated genes that differentiates the two species. Genomic islands harbor all 25 of the species-specific biosynthetic pathways, the majority of which occur in S. arenicola and may contribute to the cosmopolitan distribution of this species. Genome evolution is dominated by gene duplication and acquisition, which in the case of secondary metabolism provide immediate opportunities for the production of new bioactive products. Evidence that secondary metabolic pathways are exchanged horizontally, coupled with earlier evidence for fixation among globally distributed populations, supports a functional role and suggests that the acquisition of natural product biosynthetic gene clusters represents a previously unrecognized force driving bacterial diversification. Species-specific differences observed in clustered regularly interspaced short palindromic repeat sequences suggest that S. arenicola may possess a higher level of phage immunity, whereas a highly duplicated family of polymorphic membrane proteins provides evidence for a new mechanism of marine adaptation in Gram-positive bacteria.

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Paul R. Jensen

University of California

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Joseph P. Noel

Salk Institute for Biological Studies

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Heinz G. Floss

University of Washington

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John A. Kalaitzis

University of New South Wales

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