Article

Phylogenetic Diversity and Enzymatic Activities of Cultivable Actinomycetes Isolated from Marine Sediment at Ain Achir (Gulf of Annaba, Algeria)

Details

Citation

Meriane I, McMillan S, Desbois AP & Kitouni M (2025) Phylogenetic Diversity and Enzymatic Activities of Cultivable Actinomycetes Isolated from Marine Sediment at Ain Achir (Gulf of Annaba, Algeria). Ocean Science Journal, 60 (4). https://doi.org/10.1007/s12601-025-00250-w

Abstract
Algerian marine sediments are an underexplored and potentially rich source of microorganisms that may produce useful metabolites and enzymes. Here, we investigated the phylogenetic diversity and enzymatic activities of suspected Actinomycetia bacteria isolated from seabed sediment at Ain Achir, Gulf of Annaba, Algeria. Morphological, physiological and taxonomical properties were characterized and their potential to produce enzyme activities was studied. Phylogenetic analysis of partial 16S rRNA gene sequences assigned isolates into five main genera: Rhodococcus (21/35), Microbacterium (5/35), Streptomyces (3/35), Brevibacterium (2/35) and Agromyces (2/35). Screening for 14 enzymatic activities demonstrated their abilities to metabolize a wide range of substrates including DNA, L-asparagine, and L-glutamine (each degraded by all 35 isolates). Other substrates degraded by most isolates included uric acid and urea (both 33/35), starch (25/35) and tyrosine (24/35). Moreover, the number of enzymatic activities possessed by the isolates ranged from six (one isolate) to 10 (four isolates). This study is the first to investigate the phylogenetic diversity and enzymatic activities of actinomycetes isolated from sea sediment in the Gulf of Annaba and it confirms that actinomycetes from the marine environment are a valuable source of enzymes, with further investigation required to unlock their potential commercial applications.

Keywords
Actinomycetota; Biodiscovery; Chitinase; Proteases; Streptomycetes

Journal
Ocean Science Journal: Volume 60, Issue 4

StatusPublished
FundersUniversity of Stirling
Publication date31/12/2025
Publication date online30/11/2025
Date accepted by journal28/10/2025
URLhttp://hdl.handle.net/1893/37613
PublisherSpringer Science and Business Media LLC
ISSN1738-5261
eISSN2005-7172

People (2)

Dr Andrew Desbois

Dr Andrew Desbois

Senior Lecturer, Institute of Aquaculture

Dr Stuart McMillan

Dr Stuart McMillan

Post Doctoral Research Fellow, Institute of Aquaculture

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