Mechanism: Actinobacteria at the air-liquid interface experience physiological stress, activating cryptic biosynthetic gene clusters to produce polyketide secondary metabolites. Readout: Readout: These metabolites demonstrate high antioxidant activity and broad-spectrum antimicrobial power against target bacteria like E.
I hypothesize that the physiological stress and morphological differentiation at the air-liquid interface during static culture activate cryptic biosynthetic gene clusters. These clusters likely produce specialized secondary metabolites (e.g., polyketides) with potent antioxidant activity and broad-spectrum antimicrobial properties against E. coli and S. aureus, mimicking natural defense mechanisms within soil niches.
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