Spatiotemporal variation and antibacterial activity of actinomycetes isolated from high altitude grassland soils of tropical montane forest – Kerala, India

Spatiotemporal variation and antibacterial activity of actinomycetes isolated from high altitude grassland soils of tropical montane forest – Kerala, India

This is an automatically generated default intro template – please do not edit.


General information


Title: Spatiotemporal variation and antibacterial activity of actinomycetes isolated from high altitude grassland soils of tropical montane forest – Kerala, India
Meta keywords:
Meta description:

Images information


Images path absolute: /home/studia/public_html/v15/images/stories/com_form2content/p3/f315
Images path relative: com_form2content/p3/f315
Thumbs path absolute:
Thumbs path relative:

Fields information


Article_Title: Spatiotemporal variation and antibacterial activity of actinomycetes isolated from high altitude
grassland soils of tropical montane forest – Kerala, India
Authors: Rinoy Varghese, Suchithra R., Nishamol S. and A.A. Mohamed Hatha
Affiliation: School of Environmental Sciences, Mahatma Gandhi University, Kottayam, Kerala.
Department of Marine Biology, Microbiology and Biochemistry, Cochin University of Science and Technology, Cochin, Kerala.
Abstract: The invention of novel antibiotics and other bioactive microbial metabolites continues to be an important aim in new drug discovery programmes. Actinomycetes have the potential to synthesize lots of diverse biologically vigorous secondary metabolites and in the last decades actinomycetes became the most productive source for antibiotics. Therefore in the present study we analyze the antibacterial activity of the actinomycetes isolated from grassland soil samples of Tropical Montane forest. A total of 33 actinomycete strains isolated were characterized and screened for antibacterial activities using well diffusion method against six specific pathogenic organisms. Identification of the isolates revealed that the majority of them were belonging to Streptomycetes followed by Nocardia, Micromonospora, Pseudonocardia, Streptosporangium, Nocardiopsis and Saccharomonospora. Among the 33 isolates, Gr1 strain showed antagonistic activity against all checked pathogens. Nine strains showed antibacaterial activity against Listeria, Vibrio cholera, Bacillus cereus, Staphylococcus aureus and Salmonella typhi and only 2 strains (Gr1and Gr25) showed antagonism to E. coli. The overall percentage of activity of actinomycetes isolates against each pathogenic bacterium was also calculated. While 63.63% of the actinomycetes were antagoinistic against Listeria, Vibrio cholerae, and Bacillus cereus, 60.6% of them were antagonistic to Staphylococcus aureus. Very few isolates (6.06%) showed antibacterial activity against E. coli. In general most of the actinomycetes isolates were antagonistic to gram-positive bacteria such as Listeria, Bacillus and Staphylococcus than Gram-negative bacteria Vibrio cholerae, E. coli and Salmonella.
Keywords: Tropical montane forest, Soil, Actinomycetes, Antibacterial activity, Antibiotics
References: Al-bari MAA, Khan MA, Islam MR, Zahan MM, Rahman MS, Islam AUM, Mosaddk AM, Isolation and in vitro antimicrobial activity of ethyl acetat extract from Streptomyces bangladeshiensis, Res J Microbiol, 2, 272-277, 2007.
Balagurunathan R, Xu L, Jiang C, Diversity of soil actinomycetes from South India and South China, Actino, 4, 89-94, 1996.
Barnes BV, Zak DR, Denton SR, Spurr SH, Forest Ecology, Fourth ed., Wiley, New York, 74, 1998.
Bhatt SA, Pandya SM, Seasonal changes in microbial biomass and enzyme activities in some soils of western India, Asian Jr. of Microbiol. Biotech. Env. Sc., 8, 69–73, 2006.
Breithaupt H, The new antibiotics. Nat Biotechnol., 17:,1165-19, 1999.
Demain AL, Microbial natural products: alive and well in 1998. Nat. Biotechnol., 16, 3–4, 1999.
Gordon RE, The ecology of soil bacteria. TRG Gray and Parkinson. Liverpool University Press, 1967.
Greenberg EP, Bacterial communication and group behavior, J. Clin. Invest., 112, 1288-90, 2003.
Holt JG, Krieg NR, Sneath PHA, Staley JT, Williams ST, Bergey’s Manual of Determinative Bacteriology, Williams and Wilkins. London. 1989.
Hozzein WN, Ali MIA, Rabie W, A new preferential medium for enumeration and isolation of desert actinomycetes, World J. Microbiol. Biotechnol., 24,1547-1552, 2008.
Maire N, Borcard D, Laczko E, Matthey W, Organic matter cycling in grassland soils of the Swiss Jura mountains: biodiversity and strategies of the living communities, Soil Biol Biochem., 31, 1281-1293, 1999.
Pandey B, Ghimire P, Agrawal VP, Studies on the antibacterial activity of the Actinomycetes isolated from the Khumbu Region of Nepal, J Biol.Sci., 23, 44-53. 2004
Robbers JE, Speedie MK, Tyler TE, Antibiotics in Pharmacognosy and pharacobiotechnology, Williams and Wilkins, A waverly company, 219. 1996.
Sahin N, 2002 Investigation of the antimicrobial activity of some Streptomyces isolates, Turk J Biol, 27, 79-84, 2002.
Scherrer R, Gerhardt P, Molecular sieving by the Bacillus megaterium cell wall and protoplast, J. Bacteriol., 107, 718-735, 1971.
Scowcroft PG, Turner DR, Vitousek PM, Decomposition of Metrosideros polymorpha leaf litter along elevational gradients in Hawaii, Global Change Biol., 6, 73-85, 2000.
Thakur D, Yadav A, Gogoi BK, Bora TC, Isolation and screening of Streptomyces in soil of protected forest areas from the states of Assam and Tripura, India, for antimicrobial metabolites, J Mycol Med, 17, 242-249, 2007.
Wang Y, Zhangm ZS, Ruan JS, Wang YM, Ali SM (1999). Investigation of actinomycete diversity in the tropical rainforests of Singapore, J Ind Microbiol Biot, 23, 178-187,1999.
Wijittra A, Tanasupawat S, Amnuoypo S, Suwanborirux K, (2006). Identification and antimicrobial activities of actinomycetes from soils in Samed Island and geldanamycin from strain PC4-3, Thai J. Pharm. Sci. 30, 49-56, 2006.
Zahner H, Fiedler HP (1995). The need for new antibiotics: possible ways forward. In: Hunter, P.A., Darby, G.K., Russell, N.J. (Eds.), Fifty years of antimicrobials: past perspectives and future trends. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, 67–84, 1995.
Read_full_article: pdf/22-2012/22-3-2012/SU22-3-2012-Varghese.pdf
Correspondence:

Read full article
Article Title: Spatiotemporal variation and antibacterial activity of actinomycetes isolated from high altitude
grassland soils of tropical montane forest – Kerala, India
Authors: Rinoy Varghese, Suchithra R., Nishamol S. and A.A. Mohamed Hatha
Affiliation: School of Environmental Sciences, Mahatma Gandhi University, Kottayam, Kerala.
Department of Marine Biology, Microbiology and Biochemistry, Cochin University of Science and Technology, Cochin, Kerala.
Abstract: The invention of novel antibiotics and other bioactive microbial metabolites continues to be an important aim in new drug discovery programmes. Actinomycetes have the potential to synthesize lots of diverse biologically vigorous secondary metabolites and in the last decades actinomycetes became the most productive source for antibiotics. Therefore in the present study we analyze the antibacterial activity of the actinomycetes isolated from grassland soil samples of Tropical Montane forest. A total of 33 actinomycete strains isolated were characterized and screened for antibacterial activities using well diffusion method against six specific pathogenic organisms. Identification of the isolates revealed that the majority of them were belonging to Streptomycetes followed by Nocardia, Micromonospora, Pseudonocardia, Streptosporangium, Nocardiopsis and Saccharomonospora. Among the 33 isolates, Gr1 strain showed antagonistic activity against all checked pathogens. Nine strains showed antibacaterial activity against Listeria, Vibrio cholera, Bacillus cereus, Staphylococcus aureus and Salmonella typhi and only 2 strains (Gr1and Gr25) showed antagonism to E. coli. The overall percentage of activity of actinomycetes isolates against each pathogenic bacterium was also calculated. While 63.63% of the actinomycetes were antagoinistic against Listeria, Vibrio cholerae, and Bacillus cereus, 60.6% of them were antagonistic to Staphylococcus aureus. Very few isolates (6.06%) showed antibacterial activity against E. coli. In general most of the actinomycetes isolates were antagonistic to gram-positive bacteria such as Listeria, Bacillus and Staphylococcus than Gram-negative bacteria Vibrio cholerae, E. coli and Salmonella.
Keywords: Tropical montane forest, Soil, Actinomycetes, Antibacterial activity, Antibiotics
References: Al-bari MAA, Khan MA, Islam MR, Zahan MM, Rahman MS, Islam AUM, Mosaddk AM, Isolation and in vitro antimicrobial activity of ethyl acetat extract from Streptomyces bangladeshiensis, Res J Microbiol, 2, 272-277, 2007.
Balagurunathan R, Xu L, Jiang C, Diversity of soil actinomycetes from South India and South China, Actino, 4, 89-94, 1996.
Barnes BV, Zak DR, Denton SR, Spurr SH, Forest Ecology, Fourth ed., Wiley, New York, 74, 1998.
Bhatt SA, Pandya SM, Seasonal changes in microbial biomass and enzyme activities in some soils of western India, Asian Jr. of Microbiol. Biotech. Env. Sc., 8, 69–73, 2006.
Breithaupt H, The new antibiotics. Nat Biotechnol., 17:,1165-19, 1999.
Demain AL, Microbial natural products: alive and well in 1998. Nat. Biotechnol., 16, 3–4, 1999.
Gordon RE, The ecology of soil bacteria. TRG Gray and Parkinson. Liverpool University Press, 1967.
Greenberg EP, Bacterial communication and group behavior, J. Clin. Invest., 112, 1288-90, 2003.
Holt JG, Krieg NR, Sneath PHA, Staley JT, Williams ST, Bergey’s Manual of Determinative Bacteriology, Williams and Wilkins. London. 1989.
Hozzein WN, Ali MIA, Rabie W, A new preferential medium for enumeration and isolation of desert actinomycetes, World J. Microbiol. Biotechnol., 24,1547-1552, 2008.
Maire N, Borcard D, Laczko E, Matthey W, Organic matter cycling in grassland soils of the Swiss Jura mountains: biodiversity and strategies of the living communities, Soil Biol Biochem., 31, 1281-1293, 1999.
Pandey B, Ghimire P, Agrawal VP, Studies on the antibacterial activity of the Actinomycetes isolated from the Khumbu Region of Nepal, J Biol.Sci., 23, 44-53. 2004
Robbers JE, Speedie MK, Tyler TE, Antibiotics in Pharmacognosy and pharacobiotechnology, Williams and Wilkins, A waverly company, 219. 1996.
Sahin N, 2002 Investigation of the antimicrobial activity of some Streptomyces isolates, Turk J Biol, 27, 79-84, 2002.
Scherrer R, Gerhardt P, Molecular sieving by the Bacillus megaterium cell wall and protoplast, J. Bacteriol., 107, 718-735, 1971.
Scowcroft PG, Turner DR, Vitousek PM, Decomposition of Metrosideros polymorpha leaf litter along elevational gradients in Hawaii, Global Change Biol., 6, 73-85, 2000.
Thakur D, Yadav A, Gogoi BK, Bora TC, Isolation and screening of Streptomyces in soil of protected forest areas from the states of Assam and Tripura, India, for antimicrobial metabolites, J Mycol Med, 17, 242-249, 2007.
Wang Y, Zhangm ZS, Ruan JS, Wang YM, Ali SM (1999). Investigation of actinomycete diversity in the tropical rainforests of Singapore, J Ind Microbiol Biot, 23, 178-187,1999.
Wijittra A, Tanasupawat S, Amnuoypo S, Suwanborirux K, (2006). Identification and antimicrobial activities of actinomycetes from soils in Samed Island and geldanamycin from strain PC4-3, Thai J. Pharm. Sci. 30, 49-56, 2006.
Zahner H, Fiedler HP (1995). The need for new antibiotics: possible ways forward. In: Hunter, P.A., Darby, G.K., Russell, N.J. (Eds.), Fifty years of antimicrobials: past perspectives and future trends. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, 67–84, 1995.
*Correspondence: