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1.
Cell ; 175(1): 10-13, 2018 09 20.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30217361

ABSTRACT

This year's Lasker Clinical Research Award goes to James Baird Glen for the discovery and development of the anesthetic propofol. Patients benefit from its fast onset and rapid systemic clearance, eliminating the prolonged sedation effects experienced with earlier agents. In just 30 years, propofol has been adopted around the world for safe and controlled induction of anesthesia.


Subject(s)
Propofol/pharmacology , Propofol/therapeutic use , Anesthesia/history , Anesthesia/methods , Awards and Prizes , History, 21st Century , Humans , Propofol/history
2.
Annu Rev Biochem ; 86: 1-19, 2017 06 20.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28125288

ABSTRACT

After an undergraduate degree in biology at Harvard, I started graduate school at The Rockefeller Institute for Medical Research in New York City in July 1965. I was attracted to the chemical side of biochemistry and joined Fritz Lipmann's large, hierarchical laboratory to study enzyme mechanisms. That work led to postdoctoral research with Robert Abeles at Brandeis, then a center of what, 30 years later, would be called chemical biology. I spent 15 years on the Massachusetts Institute of Technology faculty, in both the Chemistry and Biology Departments, and then 26 years on the Harvard Medical School Faculty. My research interests have been at the intersection of chemistry, biology, and medicine. One unanticipated major focus has been investigating the chemical logic and enzymatic machinery of natural product biosynthesis, including antibiotics and antitumor agents. In this postgenomic era it is now recognized that there may be from 105 to 106 biosynthetic gene clusters as yet uncharacterized for potential new therapeutic agents.


Subject(s)
Anti-Bacterial Agents/metabolism , Antineoplastic Agents/metabolism , Biochemistry/history , Biological Products/metabolism , Biomedical Research/history , Drug Industry/history , Anti-Bacterial Agents/chemistry , Antineoplastic Agents/chemistry , Biochemistry/trends , Biological Products/chemistry , Biomedical Research/trends , Drug Industry/trends , Gene Expression Regulation , History, 20th Century , History, 21st Century , Humans , Ligases/genetics , Ligases/metabolism , Multienzyme Complexes/genetics , Multienzyme Complexes/metabolism , Vancomycin Resistance/genetics , Workforce
3.
Cell ; 185(25): 4861, 2022 Dec 08.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36493757
4.
Nat Prod Rep ; 40(2): 326-386, 2023 02 22.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36268810

ABSTRACT

Covering: 2000 to 2022Secondary metabolites are assembled by drawing off and committing some of the flux of primary metabolic building blocks to sets of enzymes that tailor the maturing scaffold to increase architectural and framework complexity, often balancing hydrophilic and hydrophobic surfaces. In this review we examine the small number of chemical strategies that tailoring enzymes employ in maturation of scaffolds. These strategies depend both on the organic functional groups present at each metabolic stage and one of two tailoring enzyme strategies. Nonoxidative tailoring enzymes typically transfer electrophilic fragments, acyl, alkyl and glycosyl groups, from a small set of thermodynamically activated but kinetically stable core metabolites. Oxidative tailoring enzymes can be oxygen-independent or oxygen-dependent. The oxygen independent oxidoreductases are often reversible nicotinamide-utilizing redox catalysts, flipping the nucleophilicity and electrophilicity of functional groups in pathway intermediates. O2-dependent oxygenases, both mono- and dioxygenases, act by orthogonal, one electron strategies, generating carbon radical species. At sp3 substrate carbons, product alcohols may then behave as nucleophiles for subsequent waves of enzymatic tailoring. At sp2 carbons in olefins, electrophilic epoxides have opposite reactivity and often function as "disappearing groups", opened by intramolecular nucleophiles during metabolite maturation. "Thwarted" oxygenases generate radical intermediates that rearrange internally and are not captured oxygenatively.


Subject(s)
Biosynthetic Pathways , Oxygenases , Oxygenases/metabolism , Oxidoreductases/metabolism , Oxidation-Reduction , Oxygen/metabolism
5.
J Am Chem Soc ; 143(50): 21127-21142, 2021 12 22.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34860516

ABSTRACT

The rising prevalence of multidrug-resistant bacteria is an urgent health crisis that can only be countered through renewed investment in the discovery and development of antibiotics. There is no panacea for the antibacterial resistance crisis; instead, a multifaceted approach is called for. In this Perspective we make the case that, in the face of evolving clinical needs and enabling technologies, numerous validated antibacterial targets and associated lead molecules deserve a second look. At the same time, many worthy targets lack good leads despite harboring druggable active sites. Creative and inspired techniques buoy discovery efforts; while soil screening efforts frequently lead to antibiotic rediscovery, researchers have found success searching for new antibiotic leads by studying underexplored ecological niches or by leveraging the abundance of available data from genome mining efforts. The judicious use of "polypharmacology" (i.e., the ability of a drug to alter the activities of multiple targets) can also provide new opportunities, as can the continued search for inhibitors of resistance enzymes with the capacity to breathe new life into old antibiotics. We conclude by highlighting available pharmacoeconomic models for antibacterial discovery and development while making the case for new ones.


Subject(s)
Anti-Bacterial Agents/chemistry , Drug Discovery , Alkyl and Aryl Transferases/chemistry , Alkyl and Aryl Transferases/metabolism , Anti-Bacterial Agents/metabolism , Anti-Bacterial Agents/pharmacology , Bacterial Proteins/chemistry , Bacterial Proteins/metabolism , Drug Resistance, Multiple, Bacterial/drug effects , Gram-Negative Bacteria/drug effects , Gram-Negative Bacteria/metabolism , Gram-Positive Bacteria/drug effects , Gram-Positive Bacteria/metabolism , beta-Lactamase Inhibitors/chemistry , beta-Lactamase Inhibitors/metabolism , beta-Lactamases/chemistry , beta-Lactamases/metabolism
6.
Nat Prod Rep ; 37(1): 100-135, 2020 01 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31074473

ABSTRACT

Covering: up to 2019Metabolic production of CO2 is natural product chemistry on a mammoth scale. Just counting humans, among all other respiring organisms, the seven billion people on the planet exhale about 3 billion tons of CO2 per year. Essentially all of the biogenic CO2 arises by action of discrete families of decarboxylases. The mechanistic routes to CO2 release from carboxylic acid metabolites vary with the electronic demands and structures of specific substrates and illustrate the breadth of chemistry employed for C-COO (C-C bond) disconnections. Most commonly decarboxylated are α-keto acid and ß-keto acid substrates, the former requiring thiamin-PP as cofactor, the latter typically cofactor-free. The extensive decarboxylation of amino acids, e.g. to neurotransmitter amines, is synonymous with the coenzyme form of vitamin B6, pyridoxal-phosphate, although covalent N-terminal pyruvamide residues serve in some amino acid decarboxylases. All told, five B vitamins (B1, B2, B3, B6, B7), ATP, S-adenosylmethionine, manganese and zinc ions are pressed into service for specific decarboxylase catalyses. There are additional cofactor-independent decarboxylases that operate by distinct chemical routes. Finally, while most decarboxylases use heterolytic ionic mechanisms, a small number of decarboxylases carry out radical pathways.


Subject(s)
Carbon Dioxide/metabolism , Carbon/metabolism , Carboxy-Lyases/metabolism , Animals , Biotin/metabolism , Carboxy-Lyases/chemistry , Carboxylic Acids/metabolism , Catalysis , Coenzymes/chemistry , Coenzymes/metabolism , Humans , Metabolic Networks and Pathways , NAD/metabolism , Neurotransmitter Agents/metabolism , Niacinamide/metabolism , Pyruvate Decarboxylase/metabolism , Zinc/metabolism
7.
Chem Rev ; 118(4): 1460-1494, 2018 02 28.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29272116

ABSTRACT

Contemporary analyses of cell metabolism have called out three metabolites: ATP, NADH, and acetyl-CoA, as sentinel molecules whose accumulation represent much of the purpose of the catabolic arms of metabolism and then drive many anabolic pathways. Such analyses largely leave out how and why ATP, NADH, and acetyl-CoA (Figure 1 ) at the molecular level play such central roles. Yet, without those insights into why cells accumulate them and how the enabling properties of these key metabolites power much of cell metabolism, the underlying molecular logic remains mysterious. Four other metabolites, S-adenosylmethionine, carbamoyl phosphate, UDP-glucose, and Δ2-isopentenyl-PP play similar roles in using group transfer chemistry to drive otherwise unfavorable biosynthetic equilibria. This review provides the underlying chemical logic to remind how these seven key molecules function as mobile packets of cellular currencies for phosphoryl transfers (ATP), acyl transfers (acetyl-CoA, carbamoyl-P), methyl transfers (SAM), prenyl transfers (IPP), glucosyl transfers (UDP-glucose), and electron and ADP-ribosyl transfers (NAD(P)H/NAD(P)+) to drive metabolic transformations in and across most primary pathways. The eighth key metabolite is molecular oxygen (O2), thermodynamically activated for reduction by one electron path, leaving it kinetically stable to the vast majority of organic cellular metabolites.


Subject(s)
Metabolic Networks and Pathways , Thermodynamics , Acetyl Coenzyme A/metabolism , Adenosine/metabolism , Adenosine Triphosphate/metabolism , Glucose/metabolism , Isomerism , Kinetics , NAD/metabolism , NADP/metabolism , Phosphorus Compounds/metabolism , Protein Processing, Post-Translational , S-Adenosylmethionine/metabolism
8.
Chem Rev ; 117(8): 5226-5333, 2017 Apr 26.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27936626

ABSTRACT

Oxidative cyclizations are important transformations that occur widely during natural product biosynthesis. The transformations from acyclic precursors to cyclized products can afford morphed scaffolds, structural rigidity, and biological activities. Some of the most dramatic structural alterations in natural product biosynthesis occur through oxidative cyclization. In this Review, we examine the different strategies used by nature to create new intra(inter)molecular bonds via redox chemistry. This Review will cover both oxidation- and reduction-enabled cyclization mechanisms, with an emphasis on the former. Radical cyclizations catalyzed by P450, nonheme iron, α-KG-dependent oxygenases, and radical SAM enzymes are discussed to illustrate the use of molecular oxygen and S-adenosylmethionine to forge new bonds at unactivated sites via one-electron manifolds. Nonradical cyclizations catalyzed by flavin-dependent monooxygenases and NAD(P)H-dependent reductases are covered to show the use of two-electron manifolds in initiating cyclization reactions. The oxidative installations of epoxides and halogens into acyclic scaffolds to drive subsequent cyclizations are separately discussed as examples of "disappearing" reactive handles. Last, oxidative rearrangement of rings systems, including contractions and expansions, will be covered.


Subject(s)
Biological Products/metabolism , Cyclization , Enzymes/metabolism , Oxidation-Reduction
9.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A ; 113(44): 12432-12437, 2016 11 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27791103

ABSTRACT

Epothilones are thiazole-containing natural products with anticancer activity that are biosynthesized by polyketide synthase (PKS)-nonribosomal peptide synthetase (NRPS) enzymes EpoA-F. A cyclization domain of EpoB (Cy) assembles the thiazole functionality from an acetyl group and l-cysteine via condensation, cyclization, and dehydration. The PKS carrier protein of EpoA contributes the acetyl moiety, guided by a docking domain, whereas an NRPS EpoB carrier protein contributes l-cysteine. To visualize the structure of a cyclization domain with an accompanying docking domain, we solved a 2.03-Å resolution structure of this bidomain EpoB unit, comprising residues M1-Q497 (62 kDa) of the 160-kDa EpoB protein. We find that the N-terminal docking domain is connected to the V-shaped Cy domain by a 20-residue linker but otherwise makes no contacts to Cy. Molecular dynamic simulations and additional crystal structures reveal a high degree of flexibility for this docking domain, emphasizing the modular nature of the components of PKS-NRPS hybrid systems. These structures further reveal two 20-Å-long channels that run from distant sites on the Cy domain to the active site at the core of the enzyme, allowing two carrier proteins to dock with Cy and deliver their substrates simultaneously. Through mutagenesis and activity assays, catalytic residues N335 and D449 have been identified. Surprisingly, these residues do not map to the location of the conserved HHxxxDG motif in the structurally homologous NRPS condensation (C) domain. Thus, although both C and Cy domains have the same basic fold, their active sites appear distinct.


Subject(s)
Epothilones/chemistry , Peptide Synthases/chemistry , Polyketide Synthases/chemistry , Protein Domains , Amino Acid Sequence , Bacterial Proteins/chemistry , Bacterial Proteins/genetics , Bacterial Proteins/metabolism , Biosynthetic Pathways/genetics , Catalytic Domain , Crystallography, X-Ray , Cyclization , Epothilones/metabolism , Models, Molecular , Myxococcales/genetics , Myxococcales/metabolism , Peptide Synthases/genetics , Peptide Synthases/metabolism , Polyketide Synthases/genetics , Polyketide Synthases/metabolism , Protein Binding , Sequence Homology, Amino Acid , Thiazoles/chemistry , Thiazoles/metabolism
10.
Angew Chem Int Ed Engl ; 58(21): 6846-6879, 2019 05 20.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30156048

ABSTRACT

Enzyme-mediated cascade reactions are widespread in biosynthesis. To facilitate comparison with the mechanistic categorizations of cascade reactions by synthetic chemists and delineate the common underlying chemistry, we discuss four types of enzymatic cascade reactions: those involving nucleophilic, electrophilic, pericyclic, and radical reactions. Two subtypes of enzymes that generate radical cascades exist at opposite ends of the oxygen abundance spectrum. Iron-based enzymes use O2 to generate high valent iron-oxo species to homolyze unactivated C-H bonds in substrates to initiate skeletal rearrangements. At anaerobic end, enzymes reversibly cleave S-adenosylmethionine (SAM) to generate the 5'-deoxyadenosyl radical as a powerful oxidant to initiate C-H bond homolysis in bound substrates. The latter enzymes are termed radical SAM enzymes. We categorize the former as "thwarted oxygenases".


Subject(s)
Biological Products/metabolism , Iron-Sulfur Proteins/metabolism , S-Adenosylmethionine/metabolism , Animals , Catalysis , Humans
11.
Biochemistry ; 57(22): 3087-3104, 2018 06 05.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29236467

ABSTRACT

Enzymes in biosynthetic pathways, especially in plant and microbial metabolism, generate structural and functional group complexity in small molecules by conversion of acyclic frameworks to cyclic scaffolds via short, efficient routes. The distinct chemical logic used by several distinct classes of cyclases, oxidative and non-oxidative, has recently been elucidated by genome mining, heterologous expression, and genetic and mechanistic analyses. These include enzymes performing pericyclic transformations, pyran synthases, tandem acting epoxygenases, and epoxide "hydrolases", as well as oxygenases and radical S-adenosylmethionine enzymes that involve rearrangements of substrate radicals under aerobic or anaerobic conditions.


Subject(s)
Cyclization/physiology , Enzymes/physiology , Multienzyme Complexes/metabolism , Animals , Biochemical Phenomena/physiology , Biosynthetic Pathways/physiology , Humans , Metabolic Networks and Pathways/physiology , Multienzyme Complexes/physiology , Oxygenases/chemistry
12.
J Am Chem Soc ; 139(7): 2541-2544, 2017 02 22.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28170244

ABSTRACT

Macrocycles are appealing drug candidates due to their high affinity, specificity, and favorable pharmacological properties. In this study, we explored the effects of chemical modifications to a natural product macrocycle upon its activity, 3D geometry, and conformational entropy. We chose thiocillin as a model system, a thiopeptide in the ribosomally encoded family of natural products that exhibits potent antimicrobial effects against Gram-positive bacteria. Since thiocillin is derived from a genetically encoded peptide scaffold, site-directed mutagenesis allows for rapid generation of analogues. To understand thiocillin's structure-activity relationship, we generated a site-saturation mutagenesis library covering each position along thiocillin's macrocyclic ring. We report the identification of eight unique compounds more potent than wild-type thiocillin, the best having an 8-fold improvement in potency. Computational modeling of thiocillin's macrocyclic structure revealed a striking requirement for a low-entropy macrocycle for activity. The populated ensembles of the active mutants showed a rigid structure with few adoptable conformations while inactive mutants showed a more flexible macrocycle which is unfavorable for binding. This finding highlights the importance of macrocyclization in combination with rigidifying post-translational modifications to achieve high-potency binding.


Subject(s)
Biological Products , Peptides/chemistry , Biological Products/chemistry , Biological Products/pharmacology , Macrocyclic Compounds/chemistry , Molecular Conformation , Molecular Dynamics Simulation , Peptides/genetics , Peptides/pharmacology , Structure-Activity Relationship
13.
Nat Prod Rep ; 34(7): 687-693, 2017 07 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28513710

ABSTRACT

Antibiotics are a therapeutic class that, once deployed, select for resistant bacterial pathogens and so shorten their useful life cycles. As a consequence new versions of antibiotics are constantly needed. Among the antibiotic natural products, morphed peptide scaffolds, converting conformationally mobile, short-lived linear peptides into compact, rigidified small molecule frameworks, act on a wide range of bacterial targets. Advances in bacterial genome mining, biosynthetic gene cluster prediction and expression, and mass spectroscopic structure analysis suggests many more peptides, modified both in side chains and peptide backbones, await discovery. Such molecules may turn up new bacterial targets and be starting points for combinatorial or semisynthetic manipulations to optimize activity and pharmacology parameters.


Subject(s)
Anti-Bacterial Agents/pharmacology , Biological Products/pharmacology , Genome, Microbial , Peptides/pharmacology , Anti-Bacterial Agents/chemistry , Bacteria/metabolism , Biological Products/chemistry , Genome, Bacterial , Molecular Structure , Multigene Family , Peptides/chemistry
14.
Nat Prod Rep ; 33(2): 127-35, 2016 Feb.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26175103

ABSTRACT

Appreciation that some cyclic peptide antibiotics such as gramicidin S and tyrocidine were nonribosomally synthesized has been known for 50 years. The past two decades of research including advances in bacterial genetics, genomics, protein biochemistry and mass spectrometry have codified the principles of assembly line enzymology for hundreds of nonribosomal peptides and in parallel for thousands of polyketides. The advances in understanding the strategies used for chain initiation, elongation and termination from these assembly lines have revitalized natural product biosynthetic communities.


Subject(s)
Bacteria/enzymology , Biological Products/chemical synthesis , Gramicidin/chemical synthesis , Peptide Synthases/metabolism , Peptides, Cyclic/chemical synthesis , Polyketides/chemistry , Tyrocidine/chemical synthesis , Bacteria/metabolism , Biological Products/chemistry , Gramicidin/chemistry , Molecular Structure , Peptides, Cyclic/chemistry , Tyrocidine/chemistry
15.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A ; 110(21): 8483-8, 2013 May 21.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-23650400

ABSTRACT

Berninamycin is a member of the pyridine-containing thiopeptide class of antibiotics that undergoes massive posttranslational modifications from ribosomally generated preproteins. Berninamycin has a 2-oxazolyl-3-thiazolyl-pyridine core embedded in a 35-atom macrocycle rather than typical trithiazolylpyridine cores embedded in 26-atom and 29-atom peptide macrocycles. We describe the cloning of an 11-gene berninamycin cluster from Streptomyces bernensis UC 5144, its heterologous expression in Streptomyces lividans TK24 and Streptomyces venezuelae ATCC 10712, and detection of variant and incompletely processed scaffolds. Posttranslational maturation in S. lividans of both the wild-type berninamycin prepeptide (BerA) and also a T3A mutant generates macrocyclic compounds as well as linear variants, which have failed to form the pyridine and the macrocycle. Expression of the gene cluster in S. venezuelae generates a variant of the 35-atom skeleton of berninamycin, containing a methyloxazoline in the place of a methyloxazole within the macrocyclic framework.


Subject(s)
Bacterial Proteins/metabolism , Macrocyclic Compounds/metabolism , Peptides/metabolism , Protein Precursors/metabolism , Streptomyces lividans/metabolism , Amino Acid Sequence , Bacterial Proteins/chemistry , Bacterial Proteins/genetics , Macrocyclic Compounds/chemistry , Molecular Sequence Data , Peptides/chemistry , Peptides/genetics , Peptides, Cyclic/chemistry , Peptides, Cyclic/genetics , Peptides, Cyclic/metabolism , Protein Precursors/chemistry , Protein Precursors/genetics , Protein Processing, Post-Translational , Protein Structure, Secondary , Streptomyces lividans/chemistry , Streptomyces lividans/genetics , Thiazoles/chemistry , Thiazoles/metabolism
16.
BMC Struct Biol ; 15: 13, 2015 Jul 15.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26170207

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: Calicheamicins (CAL) are enedyine natural products with potent antibiotic and cytotoxic activity, used in anticancer therapy. The O-methyltransferase CalO6 is proposed to catalyze methylation of the hydroxyl moiety at the C2 position of the orsellinic acid group of CAL. RESULTS: Crystals of CalO6 diffracted non-isotropically, with the usable data extending to 3.4 Å. While no single method of crystal structure determination yielded a structure of CalO6, we were able to determine its structure by using molecular replacement-guided single wavelength anomalous dispersion by using diffraction data from native crystals of CalO6 and a highly non-isomorphous mercury derivative. The structure of CalO6 reveals the methyltransferase fold and dimeric organization characteristic of small molecule O-methyltransferases involved in secondary metabolism in bacteria and plants. Uncommonly, CalO6 was crystallized in the absence of S-adenosylmethionine (SAM; the methyl donor) or S-adenosylhomocysteine (SAH; its product). CONCLUSIONS: Likely as a consequence of the dynamic nature of CalO6 in the absence of its cofactor, the central region of CalO6, which forms a helical lid-like structure near the active site in CalO6 and similar enzymes, is not observed in the electron density. We propose that this region controls the entry of SAM into and the exit of SAH from the active site of CalO6 and shapes the active site for substrate binding and catalysis.


Subject(s)
Aminoglycosides/biosynthesis , Bacterial Proteins/chemistry , Micromonospora/enzymology , Protein O-Methyltransferase/chemistry , Bacterial Proteins/genetics , Bacterial Proteins/metabolism , Crystallography, X-Ray , Micromonospora/genetics , Micromonospora/metabolism , Models, Molecular , Protein Folding , Protein O-Methyltransferase/genetics , Protein O-Methyltransferase/metabolism , Protein Structure, Secondary , S-Adenosylhomocysteine/metabolism , S-Adenosylmethionine/metabolism
17.
Cell Microbiol ; 16(8): 1267-83, 2014 Aug.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-24612080

ABSTRACT

Aerial spores, crucial for propagation and dispersal of the Kingdom Fungi, are commonly the initial inoculum of pathogenic fungi. Natural products (secondary metabolites) have been correlated with fungal spore development and enhanced virulence in the human pathogen Aspergillus fumigatus but mechanisms for metabolite deposition in the spore are unknown. Metabolomic profiling of A. fumigatus deletion mutants of fumiquinazoline (Fq) cluster genes reveal that the first two products of the Fq cluster, FqF and FqA, are produced to comparable levels in all fungal tissues but the final enzymatically derived product, FqC, predominantly accumulates in the fungal spore. Loss of the sporulation-specific transcription factor, BrlA, yields a strain unable to produce FqA or FqC. Fluorescence microscopy showed FmqD, the oxidoreductase required to generate FqC, was secreted via the Golgi apparatus to the cell wall in an actin-dependent manner. In contrast, all other members of the Fq pathway including the putative transporter, FmqE - which had no effect on Fq biosynthesis - were internal to the hyphae. The co-ordination of BrlA-mediated tissue specificity with FmqD secretion to the cell wall presents a previously undescribed mechanism to direct localization of specific secondary metabolites to spores of the differentiating fungus.


Subject(s)
Aspergillus fumigatus/genetics , Fungal Proteins/genetics , Oxidoreductases/biosynthesis , Spores, Fungal/growth & development , Transcription Factors/genetics , Gene Expression Regulation, Fungal , Oxidoreductases/metabolism , Quinazolines/metabolism , Spores, Fungal/genetics , Spores, Fungal/metabolism , Tryptophan/analogs & derivatives , Tryptophan/metabolism
19.
Biochemistry ; 53(18): 2875-83, 2014 May 13.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-24779441

ABSTRACT

Two hallmarks of assembly line polyketide synthases have motivated an interest in these unusual multienzyme systems, their stereospecificity and their capacity for directional biosynthesis. In this review, we summarize the state of knowledge regarding the mechanistic origins of these two remarkable features, using the 6-deoxyerythronolide B synthase as a prototype. Of the 10 stereocenters in 6-deoxyerythronolide B, the stereochemistry of nine carbon atoms is directly set by ketoreductase domains, which catalyze epimerization and/or diastereospecific reduction reactions. The 10th stereocenter is established by the sequential action of three enzymatic domains. Thus, the problem has been reduced to a challenge in mainstream enzymology, where fundamental gaps remain in our understanding of the structural basis for this exquisite stereochemical control by relatively well-defined active sites. In contrast, testable mechanistic hypotheses for the phenomenon of vectorial biosynthesis are only just beginning to emerge. Starting from an elegant theoretical framework for understanding coupled vectorial processes in biology [Jencks, W. P. (1980) Adv. Enzymol. Relat. Areas Mol. Biol. 51, 75-106], we present a simple model that can explain assembly line polyketide biosynthesis as a coupled vectorial process. Our model, which highlights the important role of domain-domain interactions, not only is consistent with recent observations but also is amenable to further experimental verification and refinement. Ultimately, a definitive view of the coordinated motions within and between polyketide synthase modules will require a combination of structural, kinetic, spectroscopic, and computational tools and could be one of the most exciting frontiers in 21st Century enzymology.


Subject(s)
Multienzyme Complexes/metabolism , Polyketide Synthases/metabolism , Models, Chemical , Models, Molecular , Multienzyme Complexes/chemistry , Polyketide Synthases/chemistry , Protein Structure, Tertiary , Stereoisomerism
20.
Biochemistry ; 53(38): 6063-77, 2014 Sep 30.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25184411

ABSTRACT

The soil actinomycete Kutzneria sp. 744 produces a class of highly decorated hexadepsipeptides, which represent a new chemical scaffold that has both antimicrobial and antifungal properties. These natural products, known as kutznerides, are created via nonribosomal peptide synthesis using various derivatized amino acids. The piperazic acid moiety contained in the kutzneride scaffold, which is vital for its antibiotic activity, has been shown to derive from the hydroxylated product of l-ornithine, l-N(5)-hydroxyornithine. The production of this hydroxylated species is catalyzed by the action of an FAD- and NAD(P)H-dependent N-hydroxylase known as KtzI. We have been able to structurally characterize KtzI in several states along its catalytic trajectory, and by pairing these snapshots with the biochemical and structural data already available for this enzyme class, we propose a structurally based reaction mechanism that includes novel conformational changes of both the protein backbone and the flavin cofactor. Further, we were able to recapitulate these conformational changes in the protein crystal, displaying their chemical competence. Our series of structures, with corroborating biochemical and spectroscopic data collected by us and others, affords mechanistic insight into this relatively new class of flavin-dependent hydroxylases and adds another layer to the complexity of flavoenzymes.


Subject(s)
Actinobacteria/enzymology , Bacterial Proteins/metabolism , Crystallography, X-Ray , Flavin-Adenine Dinucleotide/metabolism , Mixed Function Oxygenases/metabolism , Actinobacteria/metabolism , Bacterial Proteins/chemistry , Bacterial Proteins/genetics , Catalytic Domain , Crystallization , Gene Expression Regulation, Bacterial , Mixed Function Oxygenases/genetics , Models, Molecular , NADP/metabolism , Oxidation-Reduction , Protein Conformation
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