Field sampling marine plankton for biodiscovery
Permanent link
https://hdl.handle.net/10037/11911DOI
doi:10.1038/s41598-017-15980-8Date
2017-11-20Type
Journal articleTidsskriftartikkel
Peer reviewed
Author
Ingebrigtsen, Richard Andre; Hansen, Espen; Andersen, Jeanette Hammer; Eilertsen, Hans ChristianAbstract
Microalgae and plankton can be a rich source of bioactivity. However, induction of secondary metabolite
production in lab conditions can be difficult. One simple way of bypassing this issue is to collect biomass
in the field and screen for bioactivity. Therefore, bulk net samples from three areas along the coast
of northern Norway and Spitsbergen were collected, extracted and fractionated. Biomass samples
from a strain of a mass-cultivated diatom
Porosira glacialis
were used as a reference for comparison to
field samples. Screening for bioactivity was performed with 13 assays within four therapeutic areas:
antibacterial, anticancer, antidiabetes and antioxidation. We analysed the metabolic profiles of the
samples using high resolution - mass spectroscopy (HR-MS). Principal component analysis showed a
marked difference in metabolite profiles between the field samples and the photobioreactor culture;
furthermore, the number of active fractions and extent of bioactivity was different in the field compared
to the photobioreactor samples. We found varying levels of bioactivity in all samples, indicating that
complex marine field samples could be used to investigate bioactivities from otherwise inaccessible
sources. Furthermore, we hypothesize that metabolic pathways that would otherwise been silent under
controlled growth in monocultures, might have been activated in the field samples.