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The Biological Activities of the Metabolites of Microbes Present in the Indoor
Air
Principal investigator: Prof. Atte von Wright, Ph.D., Department of
Biochemistry and Biotechnology, University of Kuopio, e-mail: atte.vonwright@uku.fi
Abstract Microbial aerosols in houses suffering from excessive humidity are a
serious public health problem. So far the main attention has been focused to the
sensitizing properties of microbes and their degradation products. However, the
microbes present in problem houses (molds and actinomycetes) are known producers
of bioactive secondary metabolites such as antibiotics and toxins. The role of
these secondary metabolites in the sick building syndrome is still largely
unknown. In a previous screen a number of fungal and actinomycete isolates from
problem houses were shown to have antibiotic properties against other microbes.
Some of the isolates produced unidentified compounds reacting with DNA. Because
of the role of DNA-damage in tumour induction these genotoxins might present a
previously unknown risk associated with indoor air. In order to evaluate this
risk it is necessary to identify the compounds in question, study their
genotoxic potential, their production conditions and prevalence, volatility,
stability, and possible other harmful effects. The aim of the project proposed
in this application is to isolate and identify some of the most potent
genotoxins produced by the representative microbial isolates from problem
houses. The isolation is based on the fractionation of the culture media by
standard procedures (organic solvent extraction, affinity chromatography, thin
layer chromatography, HPLC etc.). The activity of the fractions is monitored by
their selective toxicity to a DNA-repair-deficient bacterial strain extremely
sensitive to DNA-damage. A more thorough mutagenicity testing with both
bacterial and mammmalian test systems is then applied to the purified fractions.
Purified substances are characterized using mass spectrometry, other
spectroscopic methods and NMR. When sufficient information of their chemical
nature has been obtained this can be used as a basis of their detection in
actual problem houses and for a tentative risk evaluation.