Microbe generates extraordinarily diverse array of peptide

Thursday, June 22, 2017 - 23:31 in Biology & Nature

It’s one of the tiniest organisms on Earth, but also one of the most abundant. And now, the microscopic marine bacteria called Prochlorococcus can add one more superlative to its list of attributes: It evolves new kinds of metabolites called lanthipeptides, more abundantly and rapidly than any other known organism. While most bacteria contain genes to pump out one or two versions of this peptide, Prochlorococcus varieties can each produce more than two dozen different peptides (molecules that are similar to proteins, but smaller). And though all of Earth’s Prochlorococcus varieties belong to just a single species, some of their localized varieties in different regions of the world’s oceans each produce a unique collection of thousands of these peptides, unlike those generated by terrestrial bacteria. The startling findings, published this week in the journal Proceedings of the National Academy of Science, were discovered by former MIT graduate student Andres Cubillos-Ruiz, Institute Professor...

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