Bromotyrosine-containing natural products have been isolated from marine sponges. While studying the uptake of engineered bacterial strains by sponges, we observed the production of fistularin-3 in the sponge. To explore these results, we employed multimodal imaging to colocalize metabolites with fluorescent in situ hybridization (FISH) probes. Using mass spectrometry imaging (MSI), we measured fistularin-3 and mapped this against the FISH probes to locate the bacteria. A recent study reported that P. brasiliensis produced fistularin-3 in pure culture, but these data have not yet been reproduced. We employed MSI and FISH to colocalize the fistularin-3 spatial distribution with P. brasiliensis in sponge tissue.
McAtamney et al. (Thu,) studied this question.