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The discovery of antibiotics around one century ago was a milestone for medicine. However, despite the warning of Alexander Fleming in 1945, antibiotics were used poorly, resulting in many antibiotic-resistant pathogens. Patients infected with resistant pathogens need to get treated with additional antibiotics or, as a last resort, trust completely on their immune system. This causes 700,000 deaths per year. Most clinically used antibiotics have been derived from soil microorganisms, while other niches stayed unexplored. Exploring new niches inhabiting antibiotic-producing microorganisms may result in novel antibiotics. Furthermore, expanding the search from frequently investigated soluble metabolites to volatiles may open up numerous compounds as potential future antibiotics. This thesis is about the search for antimicrobial volatiles produced (among others) by microorganisms from social spider ecosystems, a niche that was little explored until now.
Volatiles are characterized by their high vapor pressure at ambient temperatures, allowing them to distribute fast in both the gas and water phase. They can spread quickly even in complex ecosystems using the air and potentially fulfill functions like communication and antimicrobial defense. Especially, volatiles with antimicrobial activities caught the attention of many scientists because of their potential role in pathogen defense, as we have reviewed (Article I). Volatiles are usually produced in the primary metabolism and belong to diverse chemical classes, like hydrocarbons, aromates, alcohols, aldehydes, acids, esters, amides, and thiols. Their antimicrobial spectrum ranges from antifungal, to antibacterial, anti-oomycete, and even broad-spectrum activity. Volatiles are ubiquitously produced. Especially Bacillus and Streptomyces species are often reported to produce antimicrobial volatiles. Knowledge about antimicrobial volatiles – for example, details about their modes of action – is lacking yet, but these compounds may help to overcome the antimicrobial resistance crisis in the future. Volatiles could be used in medicine and agriculture, either alone or in combination with traditional antibiotics, opening new strategies against antimicrobial resistance.
A promising source of (volatile) antimicrobials is the ecosystem of social arthropods. Due to their lifestyle in dense colonies, they likely spread pathogens between individuals, making antimicrobial defense crucial. Since the presence of antimicrobial volatiles was reported in social insect ecosystems, we investigated the unexplored volatilome of the Namibian social spider Stegodyphus dumicola (Articles II and III). In the first study, we analyzed the in situ volatilomes of the spiders’ nest, web, and bodies using GC/Q-TOF and revealed that more than 40 % of the tentatively identified volatiles were already known for their antimicrobial activities (Article II). We proved the antimicrobial activity of five pure compounds found in the samples, among others against the suggested spider pathogen Bacillus thuringiensis. These results indicate the potential role of antimicrobial volatiles for pathogen defense and could ultimately help explain the spiders’ ecological success.
Volatiles from the spider volatilome can originate from various sources, including microorganisms, surrounding plants, the spiders themselves, the spiders’ prey, so we analyzed the volatilomes of microbial nest members in a second study. The microbial nest members we selected for this were the bacteria Massilia sp. IC2-278, Massilia sp. IC2-477, Sphingomonas sp. IC-11, and Streptomyces sp. IC-207, and the fungus Aureobasidium sp. CE_32 (Article III). Several volatilomes showed antibacterial and/or antifungal activities against two suggested spider pathogens. The subsequent volatilome analyses using GC/Q-TOF revealed the presence of many volatiles that have already been described as antimicrobials. Five pure volatiles were tested against two suggested spider pathogens, revealing all volatiles as antibacterial, antifungal, or both. These results support the potential role of antimicrobial volatiles in social spider pathogen defense and indicate microbial nest members as the origin of (novel) antimicrobial volatiles.
Together, the articles that constitute this thesis highlight the antimicrobial power of volatiles (Article I), indicates the volatilome of the ecosystem of S. dumicola as a potential pathogen defense (Article II), and finally reveal the spider nest microbiome as a source for antimicrobial volatiles (Article III). This knowledge not only adds to the understanding of social spider ecosystems (and likely other social arthropod ecosystems) but also has the potential to open a novel source for antimicrobial compounds that may help to counter the antimicrobial resistance crisis.
Because of its antimicrobial properties, nonthermal plasma could serve as an alternative to chemical antisepsis in wound treatment. Therefore, this study investigated the inactivation of biofilm-embedded Pseudomonas aeruginosa SG81 by a surface barrier-discharged (SBD) plasma for 30, 60, 150 and 300 s. In order to optimize the efficacy of the plasma, different carrier gases (argon, argon admixed with 1% oxygen, and argon with increased humidity up to approx. 80%) were tested and compared against 0.1% chlorhexidine digluconate (CHG) exposure for 600 s. The antimicrobial efficacy was determined by calculating the difference between the numbers of colony-forming units (CFU) of treated and untreated biofilms. Living bacteria were distinguished from dead by fluorescent staining and confocal laser scanning microscopy. Both SBD plasmas and CHG showed significant antimicrobial effects compared to the untreated control. However, plasma treatment led to a higher antimicrobial reduction (argon plasma 4.9 log<sub>10</sub> CFU/cm<sup>2</sup>, argon with admixed oxygen 3 log<sub>10</sub> CFU/cm<sup>2</sup>, and with increased gas humidity 2.7 log<sub>10</sub> CFU/cm<sup>2</sup> after 300 s) compared to CHG. In conclusion, SBD plasma is suitable as an alternative to CHG for inactivation of Pseudomonas aeruginosa embedded in biofilm. Further development of SBD plasma sources and research on the role of carrier gases and humidity may allow their clinical application for wound management in the future.
The aim of the present dissertation was to investigate the biological and chemical potential of two European mushroom species: Fomitopsis betulina and Calvatia gigantea. For this purpose, different extracts of both fungi were tested for: antimicrobial, antifungal, cytotoxic, in vitro wound healing, and anti-adhesive properties. Bioassay-guided fractionation led to the isolation of bioactive compounds, altogether 20 compounds were isolated and identified. The compounds were obtained from the ethyl acetate extracts, they included triterpenes, sterols and aromatic compounds. The separated substances from both fungi were proved for biological activities, some of them showed antimicrobial and cytotoxic activities.