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Antarctic organisms as a source of antimicrobial compounds: a patent review

Abstract

Currently, antimicrobial resistance has become a global public health problem, which has made the need for new antimicrobial compounds to deal with resistant infections an emergency. However, environments that once offered so many innovative molecules, now already exhaustively exploited, do not meet this need. In this context, a geographically isolated, under-explored and extreme environment, such as Antarctica, which holds organisms with unique physiological and biochemical characteristics, assumes great importance as a potential source of new compounds with antimicrobial activity. In this patent review, we investigate the state of technological development in the field of antimicrobial compounds obtained from Antarctic organisms, highlighting the main countries and researchers active in the field, the species utilized, the compounds obtained, and their possible therapeutic applications. As results, few patent documents were found, however they encompass a wide diversity of compounds and species, indicating a great antimicrobial potential present in Antarctic biota, including compounds active against the most important human pathogenic microorganisms, such as including methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus, vancomycin-resistant Enterococcus spp. and multi-resistant Mycobacterium tuberculosis. Furthermore, due to the increasing trend in patent applications, a significant rise in the number of patents in this area is expected in the coming years.

Key words
Antarctica; antimicrobial activity; antimicrobial resistance; natural antimicrobials; secondary metabolites

INTRODUCTION

Nowadays, there are resistance mechanisms against all classes of antimicrobial drugs available (Genilloud 2014GENILLOUD O. 2014. The re-emerging role of microbial natural products in antibiotic discovery. Anton Leeuw Int J G 106(1): 173-188.). According to estimates by the World Health Organization (WHO), treatment-resistant infections are a global public health problem that already causes about 700,000 deaths per year and could reach 10 million deaths per year by 2050 (Livermore 2009LIVERMORE DM. 2009 Has the era of untreatable infections arrived? J Antimicrob Chemother 64(1): 29-36., Interagency Coordination Group on Antimicrobial Resistance 2019INTERAGENCY COORDINATION GROUP ON ANTIMICROBIAL RESISTANCE. 2019. No Time to Wait: Securing the future from drug-resistant infections - report to the secretary-general of the united nations. Report To The Secretary-General Of The United Nations. 28 p. Available from: https://www.who.int/docs/default-source/documents/no-time-to-wait-securing-the-future-from-drug-resistant-infections-en.pdfsfvrsn=5b424d7_6.
https://www.who.int/docs/default-source/...
). This scenario makes the need for new antimicrobials an emergency. However, the success in the development of new antimicrobial drugs has become increasingly rare, raising the necessity and the scientific interest for new sources of these molecules (Durand et al. 2018DURAND GA, RAOULT D & DUBOURG G. 2018. Antibiotic discovery: History, methods and perspectives. Int J Antimicrob Agents 53: 371-382.).

The term “antimicrobial” refers to natural, synthetic or semi-synthetic compounds capable of acting against microorganisms (Guimarães 2010, Mariottini & Grice 2016MARIOTTINI G & GRICE I. 2016. Antimicrobials from Cnidarians. A New Perspective for Anti-Infective Therapy? Mar Drugs 14(3): 48.). The concept that chemicals could be used against pathogenic microorganisms in concentrations tolerable by the infected patient was first conceived by the German researcher Paul Ehrlich, who, in 1910, developed the first synthetic antimicrobial, the Salvarsan, used in the treatment of syphilis (Winau et al. 2004WINAU F, WESTPHAL O & WINAU R. 2004. Paul Ehrlich - in search of the magic bullet. Microb Infect 6(8): 786-789.). However, the greatest milestone in the history of antibiotic therapy occurred almost two decades later with the accidental discovery by the English physician Alexander Fleming of the first antimicrobial of natural origin, the penicillin, a substance produced by species of Penicillium (Nossa capa: Alexander Fleming e a descoberta da penicilina 2009NOSSA CAPA: ALEXANDER FLEMING E A DESCOBERTA DA PENICILINA. 2009. J Bras Patol Med Lab 45(5): 1. Doi: 10.1590/S1676-24442009000500001.).

The discovery of penicillin started what is known as the golden age of antibiotic therapy, a period marked by numerous discoveries of natural compounds with distinct mechanisms of antimicrobial activity, whose introduction into clinical practice has widely contributed to the increase in human life expectancy and quality (Brown & Wright 2016BROWN ED & WRIGHT GD. 2016. Antibacterial drug discovery in the resistance era. Nature 529(7586): 336-343., Aminov 2017AMINOV R. 2017. History of antimicrobial drug discovery: Major classes and health impact. Biochem Pharmacol 133: 4-19., Ventola 2015VENTOLA CL. 2015. The antibiotic resistance crisis: part 1: causes and threats. Pharm Ther 40(4): 277-283.). Notoriously, the main natural sources of these compounds were the microorganisms themselves, which use them as a form of competitive advantage by inhibiting the growth of other surrounding microorganisms (Guimarães et al. 2010GUIMARÃES DO, MOMESSO LS & PUPO MT. 2010. Antibióticos: importância terapêutica e perspectivas para a descoberta e desenvolvimento de novos agentes. Quim -Nova 33(3): 667-679., Brown & Wright 2016BROWN ED & WRIGHT GD. 2016. Antibacterial drug discovery in the resistance era. Nature 529(7586): 336-343.). However, substances with antimicrobial activity of clinical interest can also be found in multicellular organisms, both in the plant and animal kingdoms, being the result of evolutionary mechanisms to cope with infections (Chandra et al. 2017CHANDRA H, BISHNOI P, YADAV A, PATNI B, MISHRA AP & NAUTIYAL AR. 2017. Antimicrobial resistance and the alternative resources with special emphasis on plant-based antimicrobials - a review. Plants 6(2): 16., Khameneh et al. 2019KHAMENEH B, IRANSHAHY M, SOHEILI V & BAZZAZ BSF. 2019. Review on plant antimicrobials: a mechanistic viewpoint. Antimicrob Resist Infect Control 8(1): 1-28., Valero et al. 2018VALERO Y, SARAIVA-FRAGA M, COSTAS B & GUARDIOLA FA. 2018. Antimicrobial peptides from fish: beyond the fight against pathogens. Rev Aquacult 12: 224-253., Bulet et al. 1999BULET P, HETRU C, DIMARCQ JL & HOFFMANN D. 1999. Antimicrobial peptides in insects; structure and function. Dev Comp Immunol 23(4-5): 329-344.).

In opposition, microorganisms develop genetic mutations at a high rate that eventually result in defense mechanisms against antimicrobials, thus conferring adaptive advantage and becoming fixed in microbial populations. Furthermore, microorganisms also possess the capacity to transfer these genetic mutations among themselves, sharing the mechanisms of resistance even with other species (Partridge et al. 2018PARTRIDGE SR, KWONG SM, FIRTH N & JENSEN SO. 2018. Mobile Genetic Elements Associated with Antimicrobial Resistance. Clin Microbiol Rev 31(4): 1-61.). Simultaneously, the extensive and misdirected use of antimicrobials since their discovery has boosted antimicrobial resistance by serving as an artificial selection mechanism, eliminating sensitive microorganisms and selecting the resistant ones (McEwen & Collignon 2018MCEWEN AS & COLLIGNON PJ. 2018. Antimicrobial Resistance: a One Health Perspective. Microbiol Spectr 6(2): 1-26. doi: 10.1128/microbiolspec.ARBA-0009-2017.). This problem is aggravated by the vertiginous decline in the discovery of new antimicrobial drugs over the last decades (Loureiro et al. 2016LOUREIRO RJ, ROQUE F, RODRIGUES AT, HERDEIRO MT & RAMALHEIRA E. 2016. O uso de antibióticos e as resistências bacterianas: breves notas sobre a sua evolução. Rev Saude Publ 34(1): 77-84.).

One of the main reasons for the decrease in the discovery of antimicrobial compounds is that several environments, which were previously able to provide numerous innovative molecules, have now been fully explored. In this context, attention is focused on environments that are still under-explored. Because organisms obtained from new ecosystems are frequently associated with new biochemical diversity (Shinde et al. 2019SHINDE P, BANERJEE P & MANDHARE A. 2019. Marine natural products as source of new drugs: a patent review (2015–2018). Expert Opin Ther Patents 29(4): 283-309., Donadio et al. 2010DONADIO S, MAFFIOLI S, MONCIARDINI P, SOSIO M & JABES D. 2010. Antibiotic discovery in the twenty-first century: current trends and future perspectives. J Antibiot Res 63(8): 423-430.), isolated and extreme ecosystems are expected to have a greater probability of harboring organisms with unique and yet unknown physiological characteristics (Katz & Baltz 2016KATZ L & BALTZ RH. 2016. Natural product discovery: past, present, and future. J Ind Microbiol Biot 43(2-3): 155-176., Danilovich et al. 2018DANILOVICH ME, SÁNCHEZ LA, ACOSTA F & DELGADO OD. 2018. Antarctic bioprospecting: in pursuit of microorganisms producing new antimicrobials and enzymes. Polar Biol 41(7): 1417-1433.).

Among the main isolated and extreme environments known on Earth, Antarctica is recognized as the coldest, driest, most inaccessible and unexplored continent (NASA Science 2013NASA SCIENCE. 2013. The Coldest Place in the World. 2013 Dec 13 [Cited 2020 May 15]; Available in: https://science.nasa.gov/science-news/science-at-nasa/2013/09dec_coldspot.
https://science.nasa.gov/science-news/sc...
). However, even with these climatic conditions, it possesses considerable endemic ecological diversity, resulting from millions of years of isolated evolution (Bratchkova & Ivanova 2011BRATCHKOVA A & IVANOVA V. 2011. Bioactive metabolites produced by microorganisms collected in Antarctica and the Arctic. Biotechnol Biotechnol Equip 25(sup 1): 1-7.). Furthermore, due to the extreme low temperatures, which can reach -92oC, low availability of water in liquid form and the consequent high osmotic stress, well as the constant exposure to high ultraviolet radiation, microorganisms comprise the greatest part of the biomass in Antarctica (Núñez-Montero & Barrientos 2018NÚÑEZ-MONTERO K & BARRIENTOS L. 2018. Advances in antarctic research for antimicrobial discovery: a comprehensive narrative review of bacteria from antarctic environments as potential sources of novel antibiotic compounds against human pathogens and microorganisms of industrial importance. Antibiotics 7(4): 90., Rogers 2007ROGERS AD. 2007. Evolution and biodiversity of Antarctic organisms: a molecular perspective. Philos T R Soc B 362(1488): 2191-2214.).

Moreover, although it is still an under-explored environment in all its extension, numerous organisms have been obtained from diverse Antarctic habitats, such as microorganisms, fishes, macro- and microalgae, sponges, and plants (Shin et al. 2017SHIN SC, AHN IH, AHN DH, LEE YM, LEE J, LEE JH, KIM H-W & PARK H. 2017. Characterization of two antimicrobial peptides from antarctic fishes (NototheniacoriicepsandParachaenichthyscharcoti). PLoS ONE 12(1): e0170821., Martins et al. 2018MARTINS RM, NEDEL F, GUIMARÃES VBS, SILVA AF, COLEPICOLO P, PEREIRA CMP & LUND RG. 2018. Macroalgae extracts from antarctica have antimicrobial and anticancer potential. Front Microbiol 9: 412., McClintock & Gauthier 1992MCCLINTOCK JB & GAUTHIER JJ. 1992. Antimicrobial activities of Antarctic sponges. Antarct Sci 4(2): 179-183.). These have yielded compounds with various therapeutic applications, including compounds with antimicrobial activities, which were reported in the academic and patent literature. Some of these are active even against resistant and multi-resistant pathogenic bacteria, such as carbapenemase-producing Pseudomonas aeruginosa, lactamase-producing Klebsiella pneumoniae β-, and multi-resistant strains of Serratia marcescens (Núñez-Montero & Barrientos 2018NÚÑEZ-MONTERO K & BARRIENTOS L. 2018. Advances in antarctic research for antimicrobial discovery: a comprehensive narrative review of bacteria from antarctic environments as potential sources of novel antibiotic compounds against human pathogens and microorganisms of industrial importance. Antibiotics 7(4): 90., Asencio 2014ASENCIO G, LAVIN P, ALEGRÍA K, DOMÍNGUEZ M, BELLO H, GONZÁLEZ-ROCHA G & GONZÁLEZ-ARAVENA M. 2014. Antibacterial activity of the Antarctic bacterium Janthinobacterium sp. SMN 33.6 against multi-resistant Gram-negative bacteria. Electron J Biotechn 17(1): 1-5.).

In this scenario and considering the importance that the patent evaluation has in identifying technological innovations potentially useful commercially (Pires et al. 2020PIRES EA, RIBEIRO NM & QUINTELLA CM. 2020. Sistemas de busca de patentes: análise comparativa entre Espacenet, Patentscope, Google patents, Lens, Derwent Innovation Index e Orbit Intelligence. Cad Prosp 13(1): 13-29.), a patent review was carried out in the present study in order to identify the trend of patenting in the field of antimicrobial compounds isolated from Antarctic organisms, the world panorama of active countries and researchers in this area, the species of Antarctic organisms used, the nature of the compounds obtained and their possible pharmaceutical applications.

MATERIALS AND METHODS

The present study was based on a bibliographic search by patent documents (patent applications and granted patents) that refer to compounds with antimicrobial activity isolated from Antarctic organisms. To this end, a patent review was conducted between June and July 2020, covering the main international patent databases: Patenscope, database of the World Intellectual Property Organization (WIPO), Espacenet, database of the European Patent Office (EPO), The Lens, Patent Inspiration and Derwent Innovations Index.

The search was based on the key terms: (Antimicrobial OR Antibiotic OR Antibacterial OR Antiviral OR Antifung* OR Antimycotic OR Antiprotozo*) AND (Antarcti* OR Antarti* OR “South pole”). The terms were reorganized and arranged according to the respective search tools of the utilized databases. For greater efficiency in the selection of patents related to the present object of study, when allowed by the search tools of each database, the appearance of key terms was considered only in the fields: title, abstract, and claims of the patent documents, reducing, in this way, the recovery of documents that contained the key terms by causality, without presenting any relation to the scope of this review.

The patent search in the five databases returned 860 results, then an accurate reading of the documents was done in order to discard the patents not related to the scope of this review, duplicated patents, and the patents belonging to the same family. Twenty-two documents belonging to 22 different patent families were obtained at the end, as shown in Table I. However, it is important to note that, due to the confidentiality period to which some patents may be submitted, which can last up to 18 months (USPTO 2020USPTO – UNITED STATES PATENT AND TRADEMARK OFFICE. 2020. United States: United States Patent and Trademark Office; c1975-present. Manual of patent examining procedure (MPEP): Chapter 100 - Secrecy, access, national security, and foreign filing. 2020 Jun 25 [Cited 2020 Jun 30]. Available in: https://www.uspto.gov/web/offices/pac/mpep/s101.html.
https://www.uspto.gov/web/offices/pac/mp...
), the number of patent documents filed in the 18 months preceding this review (January 2019 to June 2020) may be incompletely represented.

Table I
Patent search results.

The selected patent documents were organized in electronic spreadsheets using the Microsoft Office Excel 2019® software, where descriptive analyses and preparation of tables and graphs were performed. For patent analysis, the following fields were considered: priority date, place of application (country or international office), assignees, inventors, country of origin, International Patent Classification (IPC) codes, the Antarctic organisms used as antimicrobial sources, the chemical characterization of these antimicrobial compounds, the type of antimicrobial activity and the possible applications.

RESULTS AND DISCUSSION

Temporal distribution of the patent applications

As shown in Figure 1, the 22 patent families claiming Antarctic compounds with antimicrobial activity were filed over 29 years, from 1991 to 2019, in a discontinuous time arrangement, with the longest interval without new patent applications being between 1994 and 2002. On the other hand, 2012 and 2015 were the years with the highest number of applications (3 per year). Moreover, it is possible to observe throughout the historical series an increase in the number of patent applications involving Antarctic antimicrobials, better evidenced by sectioning the application period into decades, with only three applications in the first decade, the double in the second decade and 13 new applications in the last decade, which alone corresponds to more than half (59%) of patent applications made in the entire period.

Figure 1
Distribution of the patents on antimicrobial compounds of Antarctic origin according to their respective priority years (year of the first application in the respective patent family).

This growing trend in patenting is in line with the growth observed in Antarctic research, especially in the research for industrial and pharmacological applications of Antarctic organisms, which have recently begun, in the late 20th century (Danilovich et al. 2018DANILOVICH ME, SÁNCHEZ LA, ACOSTA F & DELGADO OD. 2018. Antarctic bioprospecting: in pursuit of microorganisms producing new antimicrobials and enzymes. Polar Biol 41(7): 1417-1433., Núñez-Montero & Barrientos 2018NÚÑEZ-MONTERO K & BARRIENTOS L. 2018. Advances in antarctic research for antimicrobial discovery: a comprehensive narrative review of bacteria from antarctic environments as potential sources of novel antibiotic compounds against human pathogens and microorganisms of industrial importance. Antibiotics 7(4): 90.), and has experienced a rapid growth reflected in the number of patent applications involving Antarctic biological material (Tvedt 2011TVEDT MW. 2011. Patent law and bioprospecting in Antarctica. Polar Record 47(240): 46-55.). These facts confirm that the growing interest of the scientific community in the biotechnological potential of Antarctica extends to the field of antimicrobial compounds.

Geographical distribution of the patents

The 22 patent documents selected in this review have inventors from 13 different countries, according to the distribution shown in Figure 2a. Among them, China leads as the country of origin of the inventors of six patent documents, followed by the United States with five, South Korea and Sweden, both origin countries of the inventors of three patent documents each. Likewise, when the documents are distributed according to the country of origin of their assignees, as shown in the Figure 2b, the leading countries are China, with six, United States, with four, and South Korea, with three. These data confirm these three countries where most of the research and technology development involving antimicrobials obtained from Antarctic organisms are done.

Figure 2
Geographical distribution of the patents with antarctic antimicrobial compounds. a) Distribution of the patents according to the country of origin of their inventors, b) Distribution of the patents according to the country of origin of their assignees, c) Distribution of the patents by priority country and d) Distribution of the patents by the regional/national offices where they were granted.

However, it is worth mentioning that, while the United States has been a marked presence in Antarctica since the beginning of explorations after the Antarctic Treaty, which in itself justifies its number of patents (Cool Antarctica 2020COOL ANTARCTICA. 2020. The USA in Antarctica. [Cited 2020 Jun 30]. Available from: https://www.coolantarctica.com/Antarctica%20fact%20file/activity_of_USA_in_antarctica.php.
https://www.coolantarctica.com/Antarctic...
), China and South Korea have a relatively more recent history of research development on the continent (Brady 2013BRADY AM. 2013. The emerging politics of Antarctica. Oxfordshire (United Kingdom): Routledge, 263 p.). Of particular note is China, which since 2005 has expanded its economic and political influence on several continents, including a sudden increase in investment in exploration and research in the Antarctic continent (Brady 2010BRADY AM. 2010. China’s rise in Antarctica? Asian Surv 50(4): 759-785.). Consequently, all six patent documents in this review that have Chinese inventors and assignees are recent, being deposited over the last decade.

With regards to the places of application for these documents, the 22 families of patents have a total of nine different priority countries, as shown in Figure 2c. From these, the United States is responsible for the largest number, with seven families (31.8%), followed by China, with six (27.3%), and South Korea, with three (13.6%), while the remaining countries have one each. However, the 22 families were applied in a total of 29 different locations, including 26 national offices, two regional offices, and the WIPO international office. Currently, 10 of the 22 documents (45.4%) have not yet been granted, and only 14 of the 29 offices have granted any of these patents in their coverage territory, as illustrated in Figure 2d. China had most of the applications received (n=9) and most of the patents granted (n=6), followed by the United States, with seven applications received and five granted, and South Korea, with seven applications received and four granted.

Analysis of inventors and assignees of the patent documents on Antarctic antimicrobials

The 22 patent documents in this review have 92 different inventors, from 13 different countries, and 20 assignees, from 11 different countries. Among the inventors, the greatest fraction is Chinese (n=25, 27.2%), followed by the American inventors (n=16, 17.4%) and the South Korean (n=13, 14.1%). The principal inventor is Baker BJ, a North American researcher, professor of chemistry at the University of South Florida, who develops studies encompassing the isolation, characterization, and application of secondary metabolites of marine organisms (Chemistry College of Arts and Sciences 2019CHEMISTRY COLLEGE OF ARTS AND SCIENCES. 2019. Department of Chemistry - About US: Bill Baker. 2019 [Cited 2020 Jun 30]. Available in: http://chemistry.usf.edu/faculty/baker/.
http://chemistry.usf.edu/faculty/baker/...
). He is an inventor in three of the 22 patent documents, while seven other inventors are present in two documents each and the rest of the inventors in one document each (Figure 3a).

Figure 3
Analysis of inventors and assignees of the patents with antarctic antimicrobial compounds. a) Main* patent inventors, b) Main* patent assignees, c) Number of different assignees in each category and d) Venn diagram illustrating the distribution of the patents according to the categories of their respective assignees. *All other assignees/inventors, omitted here, are present in only one patent family each.

Similar to the inventors, most of the assignees are Chinese (n=6, 30%), while the United States, South Korea, and India are the countries of origin of two assignees each (10%). However, the main assignees are the UAB Research Foundation and the University of South Florida, owners of three documents each, as shown in Figure 3b, but they share two of these documents. Meanwhile, the Korean Institute of Ocean Science and Technology and the United Kingdom Company, Phairson Medical, which is currently dissolved, owns two documents each, being the main assignees when considering the patent documents with a single owner. As Figure 3c illustrates, most of the assignees are universities (n=8, 40%), while the second largest group comprises research and development institutes (n=6, 30%), the two groups are responsible for nine and seven of the 22 documents, respectively, according to the patent distribution shown in Figure 3d.

Analysis of the International Patent Classification (IPC) codes

Most of the patent documents in this review (n=17, 77.27%) have codes belonging to IPC class A61, which corresponds to patents involving medical or veterinary science. At the same time, another significant group of documents has the class code C12 (n=9, 40%), which corresponds to patents involving biochemistry, microbiology, and enzymology. As expected, when considering the distribution of documents according to IPC group codes, the leading group is A61P31, a group of patents on anti-infectives, whose code is present in nine out of 22 patent documents (40%). Other numerous groups are A61K38, a group of medicinal preparations containing peptides, with seven documents (31.8%), and A61K31, a group of medicinal preparations containing active organic ingredients, with six documents (27.3%). Among the groups outside the A61 class, the main one is C07K14, with four documents (18.2%), which corresponds to a group of patents involving peptides with more than 20 amino acids (World Intellectual Property Organization 2020WORLD INTELLECTUAL PROPERTY ORGANIZATION. 2020. IPC Publication. [Cited 2020 May 02]. Available from: https://www.wipo.int/classifications/ipc/ipcpub.
https://www.wipo.int/classifications/ipc...
).

Evaluation of antimicrobial compounds and source organisms

Taxonomy of Antarctic organisms referred to in the patents

As shown in Table II, the 22 patent families selected in this review refer to compounds with antimicrobial activity obtained from a total of 20 different species of Antarctic organisms, including species of bacteria, fungi, lichens, fishes, seaweed, sponges, krill, penguins and springtails. The most recurrent organism in the patent documents was the Antarctic krill, Euphasia superba, present in seven out of 22 documents (31.8%), followed by bacteria, present in four documents (18.2%), with five species mentioned, two of them belonging to the genus Streptomyces. Sponges were mentioned in three documents (13.6%) with two different species. It is also worth mentioning the diversity of Antarctic seaweed species referred, with a total of five distinct species mentioned in two patent families.

Table II
Phylogenetic distribution of the antarctic organisms referred to as source of compounds with antimicrobial activity in the patent literature.

Compounds with antimicrobial activity obtained from Antarctic bacteria

Although data on Antarctic microorganisms are relatively scarce compared to microorganisms from other environments, there are several genera and species of bacteria isolated from Antarctica that produce compounds with different mechanisms of antimicrobial action in the academic literature (Núñez-Montero & Barrientos 2018NÚÑEZ-MONTERO K & BARRIENTOS L. 2018. Advances in antarctic research for antimicrobial discovery: a comprehensive narrative review of bacteria from antarctic environments as potential sources of novel antibiotic compounds against human pathogens and microorganisms of industrial importance. Antibiotics 7(4): 90.). Among these studies, several innovative molecules have been reported, with activity against multiple clinically relevant pathogens, such as Staphylococcus aureus, Escherichia coli, Candida albicans, and even resistant and multi-resistant strains of Pseudomonas aeruginosa and Klebsiella pneumoniae (Lo Giudice et al. 2007LO GIUDICE A, BRUNI V & MICHAUD L. 2007. Characterization of antarcticpsychrotrophic bacteria with antibacterial activities against terrestrial microorganisms. J Basic Microbiol 47(6): 496-505., Bratchkova & Ivanova 2011BRATCHKOVA A & IVANOVA V. 2011. Bioactive metabolites produced by microorganisms collected in Antarctica and the Arctic. Biotechnol Biotechnol Equip 25(sup 1): 1-7., Rojas et al. 2009ROJAS JL ET AL. 2009. Bacterial diversity from benthic mats of Antarctic lakes as a source of new bioactive metabolites. Mar Genom 2(1): 33-41., Cheah et al. 2015CHEAH YK, LEE LH, CHIENG CYC & WONG V-L CM. 2015. Isolation, identification and screening of actinobacteria in volcanic soil of deception island (the Antarctic) for antimicrobial metabolites. Polish Polar Res 36(1): 67-78.). However, despite the diversity of studies in the academic literature pointing to the commercial and therapeutic potential of Antarctic bacteria in the field of antimicrobials, only four patent documents were found mentioning Antarctic bacteria, which referred to a total of only five different taxa, identified as Janthinobacterium sp., Flavobacterium sp., Streptomyces radiopugnans, Streptomyces sp. and Bacillus sp.

The patent US8956669B2 (Bej 2015BEJ AK. 2015. Anticancer and antimicrobial compounds from antarctic extremophilic microorgansims. Assignee: Uab Research Foundation. US8956669B2. 2015 Feb 17.) refers to pigments isolated from two Antarctic bacteria phylogenetically associated with the genera Janthinobacterium and Flavobacterium, respectively. The first one is the producer of a purple-violet pigment (PVP), identified by Nuclear Magnetic Resonance (NMR) as (3-[5-(3-hydroxyl-1H-indol-3yl)-2-R1-1H-pyrrol-3-ylidene]-2-R1-1H-indol), a molecule structurally similar to violacein, another antimicrobial pigment obtained from the bacterium Chromobacterium violaceum (Mojib et al. 2010MOJIB N, PHILPOTT R, HUANG JP, NIEDERWEIS M & BEJ AK. 2010. Antimycobacterial activity in vitro of pigments isolated from Antarctic bacteria. Antonie van Leeuwenhoek 98(4): 531-540., Rettori & Duran 1998RETTORI D & DURAN N. 1998. Production, extraction and purification of violacein: an antibiotic produced by Chromobacterium violaceum. World J Microbiol Biotechnol 14(5): 685-688.). The second bacterium, Flavobacterium sp., produced a yellow/orange pigment (YOP), closely related to other carotenoid pigments of Flavobacterium and identified as a probable flexirubin (Mojib et al. 2010MOJIB N, PHILPOTT R, HUANG JP, NIEDERWEIS M & BEJ AK. 2010. Antimycobacterial activity in vitro of pigments isolated from Antarctic bacteria. Antonie van Leeuwenhoek 98(4): 531-540.). Both pigments have been demonstrated as antimicrobial agents with promising activity against bacteria of the genus Mycobacterium, including Mycobacterium tuberculosis, the etiologic agent of tuberculosis, a disease considered by the WHO as a global health emergency and frequently associated with multidrug resistance, thus requiring new medications (World Health Organization 2008WORLD HEALTH ORGANIZATION. 2008. Guidelines for the programmatic management of drug-resistant tuberculosis: emergency update 2008. No. WHO/HTM/TB/2008.402. World Health Organization.).

Another document, US10501492B2 (Mishra & Mahajan 2019MISHRA PB & MAHAJAN GB. 2019. Antibiotic compounds. Assignees: National Centre for Polar and Ocean Research AND Foundation for Neglected Disease Research. US10501492B2. 2019 Dec 10.), reports a new antibacterial compound obtained from the fermented broth of an actinomycete identified as Streptomyces radiopugnans MTCC 5447, the first bacterium of the species to be isolated from Antarctica (Bhave et al. 2013BHAVE SV, SHANBHAG PV, SONAWANE SK & MAHAJAN PGB. 2013. Isolation and characterization of halotolerant Streptomyces radiopugnans from Antarctica soil. Lett Appl Microbiol 56(5): 348-355.). The antimicrobial potential of actinomycetes is already well known in the academic literature and is recognized as one of the most biotechnologically useful microorganisms in this area, especially the genus Streptomyces (Elbendary et al. 2018ELBENDARY AA, HESSAIN AM, EL-HARIRI MD, SEIDA AA, MOUSSA IM, MUBARAK AS, KABLI SA, HEMEG HA & JAKEE JKE. 2018. Isolation of antimicrobial producing Actinobacteria from soil samples. Saudi J Biol Sci 25(1): 44-46., Nedialkova & Naidenova 2005NEDIALKOVA D & NAIDENOVA M. 2005. Screening the antimicrobial activity of actinomycetes strains isolated from Antarctica. J Cult Collect 4(2004-2005): 29-35.). The compound referred to in this patent has been identified as a broad-spectrum antibacterial, with a molecular formula not yet reported in the literature (C71H83N19O18S5), especially useful in the treatment of infections by methicillin-resistant S. aureus (MRSA), vancomycin-resistant Enterococcus spp. (VRE), and even strains of M. tuberculosis resistant to four of the standard antibiotics (rifampicin, isoniazid, pyrazinamide, and ethambutol), indicating the great potential of this compound for application in the treatment of multidrug-resistant tuberculosis.

Another bacterium of the genus Streptomyces, which was identified as Streptomyces sp. Strain KC 1030, was reported in the patent document DE102004004906A1 (Bringmann et al. 2005BRINGMANN G, LANG G, MAKSIMENKA K, HENTSCHEL U, STALKE D, KOCHER N, FIEDLER H-P, BULL A, PETOVIC-OTTSTADT S & MULLER WEG. 2005. New oxygen-bridged angucyclinone derivatives, useful for treating bacterial infections and dementia, are modulators of intracellular calcium levels. Assignees: Johannes-Gutenberg-Universitaet Mainz AND Julius-Maximilians-Universitaet Wuerzburg. DE102004004906A1. 2005 Sep 01.), that claims a novel compound with antibacterial activity. This compound had the structure determined by Nuclear Magnetic Resonance (NMR) and was identified as gephyromycin, a molecule belonging to the class of angucyclinones, a well-known group of antibiotics commonly isolated from Streptomyces spp. Gephyromycin was tested against the Gram-positive bacteria S. aureus and Bacillussubtilis, the gram-negative bacteria E. coli and Vibrio sp., and the yeast C. albicans. However, it showed selective antimicrobial activity against the Gram-positive bacteria, with no effect observed on the other microorganisms (Rohr & Thiericke 1992ROHR J & THIERICKE R. 1992. Angucycline group antibiotics. Nat Prod Rep 9(2): 103-137.).

Finally, the patent CN105420164B (Chen et al. 2019CHEN X, WU X & GUO W. 2019. Antarctic-derived Bacillus sp.N311 and application of Bacillus sp. N311 for preventing and treating phytopathogenic fungi. Assignee: Third Institute of Oceanography SOA. CN105420164B. 2019 Feb 05.) refers to the use of a bacterium isolated from Antarctica, identified as Bacillus sp. N311, in the preparation of a fermentation supernatant with strong antifungal inhibitory activity against several phytopathogenic fungi, namely: Fusarium sp., Paecilomyces variabilis, Alternaria alternata, Trichoderma viride, Rhizoctonia solani, Botrytis, and Agaricusbisporus, thus showing great potential for application in the biological control of plant diseases in agriculture.

This patenting profile demonstrates a particular discrepancy between what is observed in the academic and patent literature about antimicrobial compounds isolated from Antarctic bacteria. While the scientific papers report numerous studies with positive results for antimicrobial activity, as shown in a literature review of 2018 (Núñez-Montero & Barrientos 2018NÚÑEZ-MONTERO K & BARRIENTOS L. 2018. Advances in antarctic research for antimicrobial discovery: a comprehensive narrative review of bacteria from antarctic environments as potential sources of novel antibiotic compounds against human pathogens and microorganisms of industrial importance. Antibiotics 7(4): 90.), few patents are observed in this respect. This may indicate a state of underutilization and immaturity in the field of antimicrobials obtained from Antarctic bacteria, Nichols hypothesis reinforced by the temporal distribution of these patent documents, since the four patent families referring to Antarctic bacteria are recent, with priority years between 2004 and 2015. However, taking into account that bioprospecting in Antarctica has started recently (Nichols et al. 2002NICHOLS DS, SANDERSON K, BUIA A, KAMP JV, HOLLOWAY P, BOWMAN JP, SMITH M, NICHOLS CM, NICHOLS PD & MCMEEKIN TA. 2002. Bioprospecting and biotechnology in Antarctica. CRC Res report 28: 41-59.), and considering the growth trend in the amount of patent application on antimicrobials of Antarctic origin, mentioned earlier in this paper, more patent fillings involving Antarctic bacteria can be expected in the following years.

Antimicrobial compounds obtained from Antarctic fungi and lichens

Similar to bacteria, fungi are a group of microorganisms frequently associated with pharmacologically useful molecules, including multiple types of antimicrobials (Gonçalves et al. 2015GONÇALVES VN ET AL. 2015. Antibacterial, antifungal and antiprotozoal activities of fungal communities present in different substrates from Antarctica. Polar Biol 38(8): 1143-1152.). However, in this review, only one patent family was found referring to an Antarctic fungus as a source of compounds with antimicrobial activity, the family of the Chinese patent CN106892854B (Li et al. 2019LI D, YU G & ZHU T. 2019. Indole alkaloid compound as well as preparation method and use thereof. Assignee: Ocean University of China. CN106892854B. 2019 Apr 30.). The referred compound was identified as a new indole alkaloid produced by the fungus Penicillium crustosum PRB-2, which belongs to one of the most frequently isolated and biotechnologically active fungal genera in Antarctica (Brunati et al. 2009BRUNATI M, ROJAS JL, SPONGA F, CICILIATO I, LOSI D, GOTTLICH E, HOOG S, GENILLOUD O & MARINELLI F. Diversity and pharmaceutical screening of fungi from benthic mats of Antarctic lakes. Mar Gen 2009 2(1): 43-50.). The alkaloid has demonstrated significant antiviral activity against the H1N1 virus, the etiologic agent of influenza A and cause of two pandemics, the Spanish flu pandemic, 1918-1920, and, more recently, swine flu pandemic, 2009-2010 (Xu et al. 2010XU R, EKIERT DC, KRAUSE JC, HAI R, CROWE JE & WILSON LA. 2010. Structural basis of preexisting immunity to the 2009 H1N1 pandemic influenza virus. Science 328(5976): 357-360.). Theanti-H1N1 activity was determined by observing the inhibitory effect in Madin-Darby Canine Kidney cells (MDCK cells) inoculated with the H1N1 virus. As a result, the compound showed, under the same concentration, a higher inhibitory effect than the positive control-drug, ribavirin, commercially used in the treatment of influenza. Therefore, it has shown to be a potential alternative for the development of antiviral drugs used against influenza caused by the H1N1 virus.

Additionally, a patent was found reporting the use of an Antarctic lichen as a source of compounds with antimicrobial activity, the South Korean patent KR101452324B1 (Yim et al. 2014YIM JH, KIM IC, HAN SJ, KIM D-G, LEE H-S, KIM H-U, BATARAL BP & KIM T-G. 2014. Antimicrobial and antioxidative composition containing depsidone or pseudodepsidone compound originated from Stereocaulon alpinum. Assignee: Korea Institute of Ocean Science & Technology. KR101452324B1. 2014 Oct 21.). Lichens consist of symbiotic associations between fungi and algae and are important components of several ecosystems. They are well known producers of secondary metabolites of several chemical classes, with a variety of biological activities described, such as antimicrobial, antioxidant, analgesic, and antipyretic (Müller 2001MÜLLER K. 2001. Pharmaceutically relevant metabolites from lichens. Appl Microbiol Biotechnol 56(1-2): 9-16., White et al. 2014WHITE PAS ET AL. 2014. Antioxidant Activityand Mechanisms of Actionof Natural CompoundsIsolatedfromLichens: A Systematic Review. Molecules 19(9): 14496-14527.). However, there are very few reports in the academic literature of bioactive compounds of Antarctic lichens (Paudel et al. 2008PAUDEL B, BHATTARAI HD, LEE JS, HONG SG, SHIN HW & YIM JH. 2008. Antibacterial potential of Antarctic lichens against human pathogenic Gram-positive bacteria. Phytother Res 22(9): 1269-1271., Kumar & Müller 1999KUMAR KCS & MÜLLER K. 1999. Lichen metabolites. J Nat Prod 62: 817-820.). The lichen reported in this patent was Stereocaulon alpinum, identified as the producer of two compounds with antimicrobial activity, lobaric acid, belonging to the class of depsidones, and lobarstin, belonging to the class of pseudodepsidones, two classes of secondary metabolites frequently isolated from lichens (Paudel et al. 2008PAUDEL B, BHATTARAI HD, LEE JS, HONG SG, SHIN HW & YIM JH. 2008. Antibacterial potential of Antarctic lichens against human pathogenic Gram-positive bacteria. Phytother Res 22(9): 1269-1271.). The two compounds demonstrated antibacterial activity against the Gram-positive bacteria B. subtilis and S. aureus, but lobarstin proved to be more efficient than lobaric acid.

Compounds with antimicrobial activity obtained from Antarctic fish

Fish have a much slower adaptive immune response than other animals and are relatively ignored organisms as a source of antimicrobials, with very few isolated compounds. Nevertheless, fish have very low infection rates due to the efficiency of their innate immunity, which encompasses a group of compounds of particular importance for these animals, the antimicrobial peptides (AMP’s). These molecules are the most frequently isolated among the few antimicrobial compounds obtained from fish (Ravichandran 2010RAVICHANDRAN S. 2010. Antimicrobial peptides from the marine fishes. Res J Immunol 3(2): 146-156.). In this review, two patent documents referring to antimicrobial compounds obtained from Antarctic fish species were identified, named KR101924808B1 (Shin et al. 2018SHIN SC, PARK H & KIM HW. 2018. Novel antimicrobial peptides from Antarctic fishes. Assignee: Korea Institute of Ocean Science & Technology. KR101924808B1. 2018 Dec 03.) and ITVT20103A (Buonocore & Scapigliati 2012BUONOCORE F & SCAPIGLIATI G. 2012. Peptideantimicrobico da pesceantartico. Assignee: Universitàdegli Studi dellaTuscia. ITVT20120003A1. 2012 Jun 16.), both referring to compounds of peptide nature.

The first document, KR101924808B1 (Shin et al. 2018SHIN SC, PARK H & KIM HW. 2018. Novel antimicrobial peptides from Antarctic fishes. Assignee: Korea Institute of Ocean Science & Technology. KR101924808B1. 2018 Dec 03.), claims two new AMPs similar to moronecidine, which is an already known AMP isolated from the hybrid bass fish (Shin et al. 2017SHIN SC, AHN IH, AHN DH, LEE YM, LEE J, LEE JH, KIM H-W & PARK H. 2017. Characterization of two antimicrobial peptides from antarctic fishes (NototheniacoriicepsandParachaenichthyscharcoti). PLoS ONE 12(1): e0170821.). The two moronecidine-like peptides, identified from analysis of fish genomes using the BLAST (Basic Local Alignment Search Tool) algorithm, were named moroNC-NH2 (Amino Acid Sequence: FFWHHIGHALDAAKRVHGMLSG-NH2 – Accession GenBank XP_010768425) and moroPC-NH2 (Amino Acid Sequence: FFGHLFRGIINVGKHIHGLLSG-NH2 – Accession GenBank AOW44479), respectively, from the Antarctic fish Notothenia coriiceps and Parachaenichthys charcoti. Both peptides showed strong antimicrobial activity against strains of the Gram-negative bacteria Shigella sonnei and E. coli, and against the fungus Candida tropicalis. The peptide from P. charcoti, moroPC-NH2, also showed strong antimicrobial activity against the Gram-positive bacteria Streptococcus pyogenes, Staphylococcus aureus, and Listeria monocytogenes. In addition, both peptides showed low sensitivity to salt concentrations, cold tolerance, and low toxicity, being both potentially applicable to the development of antimicrobial drugs and to the preservation of food without providing risks to human health.

The second patent document, ITVT20103A (Buonocore & Scapigliati 2012BUONOCORE F & SCAPIGLIATI G. 2012. Peptideantimicrobico da pesceantartico. Assignee: Universitàdegli Studi dellaTuscia. ITVT20120003A1. 2012 Jun 16.), claims a new antimicrobial peptide named chionodracine, isolated from the Antarctic fish Chionodraco hamatus. The peptide presented significant antimicrobial activity against the Gram-negative bacterium Escherichia coli and the Gram-positive Bacillus cereus, especially at low temperatures, which may indicate that this peptide is also specially adapted to cold (Buonocore et al. 2012BUONOCORE F, RANDELLI E, CASANI D, PICCIETTI S, BELARDINELLI MC, PASALE D, SANTI C & SCAPIGLIATI G. 2012. A piscidin-like antimicrobial peptide from the icefish Chionodraco hamatus (Perciformes: Channichthyidae): Molecular characterization, localization and bactericidal activity. Fish Shellfish Immun 33(5): 1183-1191.).

Compounds with antimicrobial activity obtained from Antarctic seaweed

Seaweeds are known to have great potential as sources of bioactive compounds because of the large number of secondary metabolites they produce. However, the state of the research on the pharmacological potential of Antarctic seaweeds is still premature, with few studies published on the topic, even though the Antarctic region is rich in algae clusters (Martins et al. 2018MARTINS RM, NEDEL F, GUIMARÃES VBS, SILVA AF, COLEPICOLO P, PEREIRA CMP & LUND RG. 2018. Macroalgae extracts from antarctica have antimicrobial and anticancer potential. Front Microbiol 9: 412.). In the patent literature, however, two patent documents were found referring to five different species of Antarctic seaweeds as a source of antimicrobial compounds, the Brazilian deposit BR1020130047929-A2 (Lund et al. 2013LUND RG, MARTINS RM, PEREIRA CMP, FUJII MT, MUCHALE BV, ROCKEMBACH CT, NETO PC & ROSA WLO. 2013. Agentes antimicrobianos à base de extratos de macroalgas marinhas. Assignee: Universidade Federal de Pelotas. BR1020130047929-A2. 2013 Feb 28.) and the North American US2014274883A1 (Olphen et al. 2014OLPHEN AV, BAKER BJ, KYLE DE, BUCHER C, MASCHEK A, MCCLINTOCK JB & AMSLER CD. 2014. Novel antiviral compounds from marine extracts. Assignees: Uab Research Foundation AND University of South Florida. US2014274883A1. 2014 Sep 18.).

The first document, BR1020130047929-A2 (Lund et al. 2013LUND RG, MARTINS RM, PEREIRA CMP, FUJII MT, MUCHALE BV, ROCKEMBACH CT, NETO PC & ROSA WLO. 2013. Agentes antimicrobianos à base de extratos de macroalgas marinhas. Assignee: Universidade Federal de Pelotas. BR1020130047929-A2. 2013 Feb 28.), discusses the use of individual extracts and combinations of four species of Antarctic seaweeds, the red seaweeds Palmaria decipiens and Plocamium cartilagineum, the brown seaweed Desmarestia anceps and the green seaweed Prasiola crispa. The document indicates the possible application of the extracts as antibacterial and antifungal agents. For this purpose, different types of seaweed polar solvent extracts were tested: aqueous, hexanic, methanolic, ethanolic, acetonic, etheric and chloroformic extracts, against strains of Candida albicans, C. parapsilosis, C.famata, C. glabrata, C. lipolutica, E. coli, Enterococcus feacalis, P. aeruginosa, and S. aureus. However, in the document, only data of the Minimum Inhibitory Concentration (MIC) of Prasiola crispa algae extracts were shown, which exhibited comparatively stronger antimicrobial actions against E. faecalis and P. aeruginosa.

The document US2014274883A1 (Olphen et al. 2014OLPHEN AV, BAKER BJ, KYLE DE, BUCHER C, MASCHEK A, MCCLINTOCK JB & AMSLER CD. 2014. Novel antiviral compounds from marine extracts. Assignees: Uab Research Foundation AND University of South Florida. US2014274883A1. 2014 Sep 18.), in turn, claims the antiviral activity of extracts from the Antarctic seaweed Gigartina skottsbergii, but indicates that other species of the same genus can be equally useful. In addition, this patent claims the individual use of any of the active compounds contained in the extracts, of which the study identified 18 sequences of amino acids. In the document, Gigartine extracts have been shown to possess antiviral activity capable of inhibiting, controlling, and destroying viruses, especially useful against various strains of influenza viruses.

Compounds with antimicrobial activity obtained from Antarctic sponges

Marine sponges host a wide range of biologically active molecules, including antimicrobial compounds that are potentially clinically useful. It is believed that sponge antimicrobial molecules have the role of preventing predation, excessive growth, and incrustations of microorganisms (McClintock & Gauthier 1992MCCLINTOCK JB & GAUTHIER JJ. 1992. Antimicrobial activities of Antarctic sponges. Antarct Sci 4(2): 179-183.).

In this review, three patent documents involving sponges as a source of antimicrobials were found. Two of them, named US9872849B2 (Baker et al. 2018BAKER BJ, KYLE DE, MASCHEK JA, VESELY B & KYLE DE. 2018. Diterpenoid membranolide compounds having anti-leishmania activity and uses thereof. Assignee: University of South Florida. US9872849B2. 2018 Jan 23.) and WO2017177142A1 (Baker et al. 2017BAKER BJ, SHAW LN, MCCLINTOCK JB, AMSLER CD, FRIES JL, WITKOWSKI CG & FLEEMAN RM. 2017. MRSA biofilm inhibition. Assignees: University of South Florida AND Uab Research Foundation. WO2017177142A1. 2017 Oct 12.), belong to the University of South Florida and refer to the same species, Dendrilla membranosa, whose antimicrobial activities were identified in a screening program.

The first document, US9872849B2 (Baker et al. 2018BAKER BJ, KYLE DE, MASCHEK JA, VESELY B & KYLE DE. 2018. Diterpenoid membranolide compounds having anti-leishmania activity and uses thereof. Assignee: University of South Florida. US9872849B2. 2018 Jan 23.), claims novel diterpenoid secondary metabolites active against Leishmania donovani, the protozoan that causes leishmaniasis, as well as other species of the same genus. The compounds were identified as Aplysulphurin, Tetrahydroaplysulphurin and eight other semi-synthetic derivatives, named membranolides A to F. Of these, the molecules with the most potent anti-leishmanial activity were Aplysulphurin and the membranolides G and H. The second document about the Dendrilla membranosa sponge, WO2017177142A1 (Baker et al. 2017BAKER BJ, SHAW LN, MCCLINTOCK JB, AMSLER CD, FRIES JL, WITKOWSKI CG & FLEEMAN RM. 2017. MRSA biofilm inhibition. Assignees: University of South Florida AND Uab Research Foundation. WO2017177142A1. 2017 Oct 12.), claims antibacterial activity of a new compound, also from the diterpenoid classes, identified as darwinolide. The antimicrobial action of darwinolide has shown to be useful in the elimination of infections and prevention of biofilm formation by methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus, being indicated by the authors for application on surfaces, whether living tissues or inanimate surfaces, suggesting a potential use in the prevention of biofilm in medical devices as well.

A third document, GB9301952D0 (Blunt et al. 1993BLUNT JW, GRAVALOS DG, MUNRO MHG & PERRY NB. 1993. Antitumor and antiviral alkaloids from an antarctic sponge. Assignee: Pharma Mar S.A. GB9301952D0. 1993 Mar 16.), refers to the application of compounds isolated from extracts of the Antarctic sponge Kirkpatrick variolosa, of which an alkaloid, identified as variolin-B, showed considerable antiviral activity against the Herpes simplex type I DNA virus.

Compounds with antimicrobial activity obtained from Antarctic Krill

According to the Antarctic Biological Prospecting Database, until the beginning of the last decade, most biotechnological innovation patents for Antarctic organisms were related to the use of Antarctic krill, Euphausia superb (Yarzábal 2016YARZÁBAL LA. 2016. Antarctic psychrophilic microorganisms and biotechnology: History, current trends, applications, and challenges. Microb Mod From Environ Ind Sust 1: 83-118. doi:10.1007/978-981-10-2555-6_5., XXXV Antarctic Treaty Consultative Meating 2012XXXV ANTARCTIC TREATY CONSULTATIVE MEATING. 2012. An Update on Status and Trends Biological Prospecting in Antarctica and Recent Policy Developments at the International Level. Information Paper 63, Agenda item ATCM 18., XXXVI Antarctic Treaty Consultative Meating 2013XXXVI ANTARCTIC TREATY CONSULTATIVE MEATING. 2013. Biological prospecting and the Antarctic environment. Information Paper 64, Agenda Item ATCM 17.). This organism is a species of crustacean of fundamental ecological role in the Antarctic oceans, it is rich in nutrients and has a high protein content, being referred to as a source of several types of active principles, such as peptides with antihypertensive activity, photoprotective compounds efficient against ultraviolet light, carotenoids, and chitins (Sun & Yan 2001SUN S & YAN XJ. 2001. Active substances in the Antarctic Krill. Chin J Polar Res 13(3): 213-216., Hatanaka et al. 2009HATANAKA A, MIYAHARA H, SUZUKI KI & SATO S. 2009. Isolation and identification of antihypertensive peptides from Antarctic Krill. Food Science 74(4): 116-120., Zhao et al. 2013ZHAO L, YIN B, LIU Q & CAO R. 2013. Purification of antimicrobial peptide from Antarctic Krill (Euphausia superba) and its function mechanism. J Ocean U China 12(3): 484-490.). Notoriously, it is the most economically important Antarctic organism, with hundreds of tons being fished annually and increasingly related to patents applied for over the years (Nicol 2011NICOL S, FOSTER J & KAWAGUCHI S. 2011. The fishery for Antarctic krill - recent developments. Fish and Fisherie 13(1): 30-40.).

In accordance with this scenario, almost one-third of the patent families selected in this review involves applications of Antarctic Krill compounds, mainly enzymes. The document WO2013149809A1 (Kochinke et al. 2013KOCHINKE F, RUTMAN M, VANSCHEIDT W & VINCENT J. 2013. Mixture of enzymes from antarctic krill for use in the removal of a biofilm. Assignee: Arcimboldo AB. WO2013149809A1. 2013 Oct 10.), for example, refers to a mixture of enzymes obtained from Antarctic Krill useful for the removal of bacterial plaque and biofilms in soft tissues and mucous membranes, as well as for the prevention of biofilm formation in tissues where they are expected to form. The patent EP0642351B1 (Lindblom & De Faire 2002LINDBLOM R & DE FAIRE J. 2002. New pharmaceutical uses of krill enzymes. Assignee: Phairson Medical. EP0642351B1. 2002 Mar 20.), in turn, claims the use of an enzyme composition obtained from Antarctic Krill, including proteolytic enzymes, for topical use in the treatment of a wide range of conditions, including bacterial, fungal and even viral infections such as Herpes. Another patent document, US6030612A (Faire et al. 2000FAIRE JR, FRANKLIN RL, KAY J & LINDBLOM R. 2000. Antimicrobial uses of multifunctional enzyme. Assignee: Phairson Medical. US6030612A. 2000 Feb 29.), claims a method for the treatment of fungal infections, such as topical, oral, vaginal, urinary, rectal or esophageal infections, through the administration of a sufficient amount of a multifunctional hydrolase enzyme derived from Antarctic Krill. The document also indicates that enzymes with similar structural composition obtained from other crustaceans, or fish, can be employed for the same purpose.

The patent document CN110512304A (Guo et al. 2019GUO J, CHEN J, YAO Q & LIU L. 2019. Preparation method of chitosan/euphausia superba protein composite fiber. Assignee: Dalian Polytechnic University. CN110512304A. 2019 Nov 29.), on the other hand, refers to the manufacture of a composition based on chitosan and Kryll-derived proteins for the production of fibers with antimicrobial properties useful in the manufacture of medical dressings, antibacterial clothing and other similar products. Meanwhile, patent CN104630313B (Lu et al. 2017LU K, CHEN Z, LI T & CHEN J. 2017. Preparation method of low-molecular weight chitosan dressing. Assignee: Guangdong Taibao Medical Science Technology. CN104630313B. 2017 Dec 29.) discusses a method for preparing low molecular weight chitosan with antimicrobial activity against E. coli and S. aureus, using Antarctic Krill as raw material. Similarly, document CN103690956A (Zhao et al. 2014ZHAO X, WU S, HUANG Z & PAN H. 2014. Hemostatic powder and preparation method thereof. Assignee: The Shenzhen Institutes of Advanced Technology. CN103690956A. 2014 Apr 02.) refers to the use of chitosan obtained from the Antarctic Krill shell to compose a hemostatic powder with antimicrobial properties, able to stop bleeding while protecting the wound against microorganisms. However, the document indicates the addition of an antimicrobial drug to the composition to maximize the antimicrobial protective effect, while the central role of the chitosan powder is the hemostatic effect. Finally, the patent document CN110724311A (Yang et al. 2020YANG L, LU Y, OUYANG X & FAN L. 2020. Method for preparing degradable packaging material by using Euphausia superba shells. Assignee: Zhejiang Ocean University. CN110724311A. 2020 Jan 24.) refers to the use of chitosan extracted from the Antarctic Krill shell to prepare a degradable, antibacterial, inexpensive product with excellent mechanical properties for food packaging.

It is pertinent to note that, despite the higher number of patent documents involving Antarctic Krill, this is not a reflection of an equally large number of new compounds. Most of these documents are correlated, referring to chitosan and proteolytic enzymes, corresponding to new applications/adaptations of an already known group of compounds.

Compounds with antimicrobial activity obtained from Antarctic penguins

Antimicrobial compounds obtained from birds are already well known in the academic literature. Antimicrobial peptides of the β-defensin class have already been identified in the blood and epithelial cells of birds such as chicken, turkey, and ostrich (Cuperus et al. 2013CUPERUS T, COORENS M, VAN-DIJK A & HAAGSMAN HP. 2013. Avian host defensepeptides. Dev Comp Immunol 41(3): 352-369., Sugiarto & Yu 2004SUGIARTO H & YU PL. 2004. Avian antimicrobial peptides: the defense role of β-defensins. Biochem Biophys Res Commun 323(3): 721-727.). These peptides have been shown to be active against a wide range of microorganisms, including Gram-positive and Gram-negative bacteria, filamentous fungi and yeasts, demonstrating considerable potential for applications in health products (Sugiarto & Yu 2004SUGIARTO H & YU PL. 2004. Avian antimicrobial peptides: the defense role of β-defensins. Biochem Biophys Res Commun 323(3): 721-727.).

One of the patents of this review, EP1517916B1 (Bulet et al. 2009BULET P, THOUZEAU C & LE MAHO Y. 2009. Spheniscins and analogue peptides having antimicrobial properties for use in preserving foods. Assignee: Centre National de La Recherche Scientifique. EP1517916B1. 2009 Dec 09.), reported a new group of antimicrobial compounds of the β-defensin category, obtained from an Antarctic penguin species, the king penguin, Aptenodytes patagonicus. The peptides were found in the stomach contents of male king penguins, with the function of conserving the food content against degradation by microorganisms of its own microbiota during the incubation period, in which the penguin fasts for up to 2 weeks. The new compounds were called spheniscins, in reference to the name of the family Spheniscidae, to which the king penguin belongs. The sphenicins showed considerable antimicrobial activity against the Gram-positive bacteria Micrococcusluteus, Bacillus spp., S. aureus, S. haemolyticus, and Nocardia asteroids, the Gram-negative bacteria E. coli 1106 and Vibrio metshnikovii NCTC 8483, and the fungi C. albicans and C. tropicalis. Results evidenced great potential for applications in antimicrobial drugs, as well as applications in the food industry to protect food against microorganisms.

Antimicrobial compounds obtained from Antarctic springtails

Springtails belong to the Collembola order, which is constituted by small, numerous and diverse aptero and hexapod arthropods, usually smaller than 6mm, found throughout the world (Fountain & Hopkin 2005FOUNTAIN MT & HOPKIN SP. 2005. Folsomiacandida (Collembola): a “standard” soilarthropod. Annu Ver Entomol 50: 201-222., Lee et al. 2009LEE YH, KIM CG & SONG JM. 2009. β-1,3-glucanase from Cryptopygusantarcticus, gene encoding the same, and use thereof. Assignee: Korea Ocean Research and Development Institute. KR100913233B1. 2009 Aug 24.). They form one of the largest groups of invertebrates living on or near the ground. The most common Antarctic representative is Cryptopygus antarcticus, or Antarctic Springtail, until now very poorly associated with some biotechnological potential, being more used for ecological monitoring and serving as an indicator for the presence of microplastic in the environment (Bergami et al. 2020BERGAMI E, ROTA E, CARUSO T, BIRARDA G, VACCARI L & CORSI I. 2020. Plasticseverywhere: first evidence of polystyrene fragments inside the common Antarctic collembolan Cryptopygus antarcticus. Biol Lett 16(6): 20200093.). However, the inventors of patent KR100913233B1 (Lee et al. 2009LEE YH, KIM CG & SONG JM. 2009. β-1,3-glucanase from Cryptopygusantarcticus, gene encoding the same, and use thereof. Assignee: Korea Ocean Research and Development Institute. KR100913233B1. 2009 Aug 24.) identified and isolated an enzyme with β-1.3 glucanase activity from the Antarctic springtail. These enzymes are already well known and widely applied, they break glycosidic linkages of the β-1,3 type and may show several biotechnological applications (Mauch et al. 1988MAUCH F, MAUCH-MANI B & BOLLER T. 1988. Antifungal hydrolases in pea tissue: II. Inhibition of Fungal Growth by Combinations of Chitinase and β-1,3-Glucanase. Plant Physiol 88(3): 936-942.), including the control of fungi and yeasts by lysing the cells of the species that have β-1,3-glucan in the cell wall. The inventors of the patent report considerable antifungal activity against Debaryomyces hansenii, C. albicans, and the phytopathogen Magnaporthe grisea.

Main therapeutically applicable findings

As shown, there is a wide diversity of compounds obtained from Antarctic organisms with therapeutically promising antimicrobial activity, most of them being secondary metabolites of peptide/protein nature, since 11 of 22 patents are characterizing the activity of peptides/proteins, as can be seen in Table II. In particular, it is worth mentioning the compounds active against antibiotic-resistant infections, which have caused increasing mortality in recent years and become more and more challenging to treat. Among these infections, this review found possible therapeutic alternatives to the main etiological agents in infections and biofilms, such as methicillin-resistant S. aureus, vancomycin-resistant Enterococcus spp. (VRE) and strains of M. tuberculosis, including a strain resistant to the four standard antimicrobial drugs used in tuberculosis treatment (rifampicin, isoniazid, pyrazinamide, and ethambutol) (Bej 2015BEJ AK. 2015. Anticancer and antimicrobial compounds from antarctic extremophilic microorgansims. Assignee: Uab Research Foundation. US8956669B2. 2015 Feb 17., Mishra & Mahajan 2019MISHRA PB & MAHAJAN GB. 2019. Antibiotic compounds. Assignees: National Centre for Polar and Ocean Research AND Foundation for Neglected Disease Research. US10501492B2. 2019 Dec 10.).

In the field of antifungals, the main target pathogens reported were of members of the genus Candida, but without notable activity. Meanwhile, in the field of antivirals, the main targets were strains of influenza virus, mainly H1N1, for which a compound was found with an in vivo efficacy superior to the commercially used drug, ribavirin (Li et al. 2019LI D, YU G & ZHU T. 2019. Indole alkaloid compound as well as preparation method and use thereof. Assignee: Ocean University of China. CN106892854B. 2019 Apr 30., Olphen et al. 2014OLPHEN AV, BAKER BJ, KYLE DE, BUCHER C, MASCHEK A, MCCLINTOCK JB & AMSLER CD. 2014. Novel antiviral compounds from marine extracts. Assignees: Uab Research Foundation AND University of South Florida. US2014274883A1. 2014 Sep 18.). Additionally, antiprotozoal compounds were found against species of the genus Leishmania, including Leishmania donovani, which causes leishmaniasis, a severe and geographically widespread disease (Baker et al. 2018BAKER BJ, KYLE DE, MASCHEK JA, VESELY B & KYLE DE. 2018. Diterpenoid membranolide compounds having anti-leishmania activity and uses thereof. Assignee: University of South Florida. US9872849B2. 2018 Jan 23., Lukes et al. 2007LUKES J ET AL. 2007. Evolutionary and geographical history of the Leishmania donovani complex with a revision of current taxonomy. Proc Natl Acad Sci 104(22): 9375-9380.). This scenario is promising regarding the potential to obtain antimicrobial drugs from active principles isolated from Antarctic organisms, particularly considering that the diversity of compounds described herein is present in a small number of patent documents, with a tendency to grow.

Bioprospecting definition and politics in the Antarctic Treaty Consultative Meeting (ATCM) forum and Scientific Committee on Antarctic Research (SCAR)

The exploration of natural resources in Antarctica is a complex subject. The overwhelming richness of Antarctic natural resources includes many different life forms. However, bioprospecting and the potential biotechnological use of Antarctica organisms have been raised as an issue of concern by some countries such as Argentine, Australia, Belgium, Brazil, Chile, France, Netherlands, New Zealand, Sweden, United Kingdom and others in various ATCM meetings. According to Working Paper 36 proposed by Netherlands, Belgium and France, presented at the XXX ATCM, biological prospecting was first discussed at ATCM XXV based on a working paper submitted by the United Kingdom (ATCM XXV WP 43 entitled ‘Biological Prospecting in Antarctica (XXX Antarctic Treaty Consultative Meating 2009XXX ANTARCTIC TREATY CONSULTATIVE MEATING. 2009. Biological Prospecting in the Antarctic Treaty Area - Scoping for a Regulatory Framework. Agenda item ATCM 17.). After that, other Working Papers on Antarctic bioprospecting were proposed in further ATCM meetings. Despite ATCM Parties recognized that Antarctic bioprospecting represents a research area and deserves action, until now there is not an official definition and regulation for biotechnological use of Antarctic organisms. There is a consensus among the ATCM Parties that Antarctic bioprospecting represents a complex issue, which will probably undergo a long and slow process until the final regulation. Recently, in the SCAR Open Science 2020 (organized by Scientific Committee on Antarctic Research), researchers of several countries presented results of their Antarctic bioprospecting studies, showing that diverse organisms are able to produce different compounds with potential biotechnological applications (Rosa et al. 2020ROSA L, CONVEY P, WATT L-M & AHMAD SA. 2020. Bioprospecting in Antarctica: A New Frontier or a Novel Threat. SCAR Open Science Conference 2020, session 24.). The increase of bioprospecting studies in Antarctica indicates that ATCM Parties should regulate this area urgently.

CONCLUSIONS

This patent review has revealed relatively few patent documents on Antarctic organisms as a source of compounds with antimicrobial activity. However, there has been an increasing trend in the number of applications over the decades, which is the reason why a considerable increase in the number of patents is expected in the coming years. Of particular note is the participation of the United States, South Korea and, more recently, China, as the most involved countries in research and patenting of antimicrobials of Antarctic origin.

Furthermore, although few in number, patent documents have reported high diversity of biological species as sources of the compounds, which confirms the antimicrobial biotechnological potential harbored by the Antarctic biota. It is worth highlighting the versatility of the Antarctic krill, the most recurrent organism among the patent documents, and the potential of the Antarctic bacteria, especially the genus Streptomyces, producers of the compounds of highest therapeutic relevance.

In general, most of the antimicrobials isolated from Antarctic organisms were of protein/peptide nature, and the majority had a novel molecular structure. The most common antimicrobial activity was antibacterial. However, antifungals, antivirals, and even anti-leishmanial were also obtained. In conclusion, the main findings of this review include active ingredient options for the treatment of the most relevant treatment-resistant infections, such as methicillin-resistant S.aureus, vancomycin-resistant Enterococcus spp. and multidrug-resistant M. tuberculosis. Further studies are required to elucidate the mechanisms of action of these compounds and to evaluate their therapeutic viability with regard to in vivo efficiency and human toxicity, in order to determine whether they are indeed viable drugs.

ACKNOWLEDGMENTS

This work has been supported by the Conselho Nacional de Desenvolvimento Científico e Tecnológico (CNPq, Grant no. Mycoantar/PROANTAR 442258/2018-6 and Universal 433388/2018-8, Programa Institucional de Bolsas de Iniciação em Desenvolvimento Tecnológico e Inovação), Fundação de Amparo à Pesquisa do Estado de Alagoas (FAPEAL), and Universidade Federal de Alagoas (UFAL). The authors thank parliamentarian Tereza Nelma da Silva Porto Viana Soares for supporting the Brazilian Antartic research. The authors would also like to thank the Coordenação de Aperfeiçoamento de Pessoal de Nível Superior (CAPES), Conselho Nacional de Desenvolvimento Científico e Tecnológico (CNPq), Ministério de Ciência, Tecnologia, Inovações e Comunicação (MCTIC), Financiadora de Estudos e Projetos (FINEP), and Fundação de Amparo à Pesquisa do Estado de Alagoas (FAPEAL). Moreover, the authors would like to thank several colleagues working at the UFAL for constructive criticism of and assistance with this project.

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Publication Dates

  • Publication in this collection
    25 Mar 2022
  • Date of issue
    2022

History

  • Received
    2 June 2021
  • Accepted
    16 Sept 2021
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