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The porcine skin microbiome exhibits broad fungal...
Journal article

The porcine skin microbiome exhibits broad fungal antagonism

Abstract

The skin and its microbiome function to protect the host from pathogen colonization and environmental stressors. In this study, using the Wisconsin Miniature Swine™ model, we characterize the porcine skin fungal and bacterial microbiomes, identify bacterial isolates displaying antifungal activity, and use whole-genome sequencing to identify biosynthetic gene clusters encoding for secondary metabolites that may be responsible for the antagonistic effects on fungi. Through this comprehensive approach of paired microbiome sequencing with culturomics, we report the discovery of novel species of Corynebacterium and Rothia. Further, this study represents the first comprehensive evaluation of the porcine skin mycobiome and the evaluation of bacterial-fungal interactions on this surface. Several diverse bacterial isolates exhibit potent antifungal properties against opportunistic fungal pathogens in vitro. Genomic analysis of inhibitory species revealed a diverse repertoire of uncharacterized biosynthetic gene clusters suggesting a reservoir of novel chemical and biological diversity. Collectively, the porcine skin microbiome represents a potential unique source of novel antifungals.

Authors

De La Cruz KF; Townsend EC; Cheong JZA; Salamzade R; Liu A; Sandstrom S; Davila E; Huang L; Xu KH; Wu SY

Journal

Fungal Genetics and Biology, Vol. 173, ,

Publisher

Elsevier

Publication Date

August 1, 2024

DOI

10.1016/j.fgb.2024.103898

ISSN

1087-1845

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