RESUMEN
l-(+)-Muscarine (1)-producing mushrooms pose a severe threat to human health as ingestion can result in circulatory collapse or even death. However, their metabolic profile is surprisingly poorly understood, including knowledge of poison release and potentially toxic congeners. In the mycelium of the 1-producing fool's funnel mushroom Clitocybe rivulosa, we identified 4'-phosphomuscarine (2) as the major natural product. Its structure was elucidated by high-resolution mass spectrometry, nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy and by comparison with a synthesized reference. We also detected this previously overlooked phosphorylated compound in the fiber cap mushrooms Pseudosperma spectrale and Inocybe nitidiuscula. Studies on the activation of the muscarinic acetylcholine receptor M3 indicate only weak affinity of 2 to this target. Furthermore, we present biological evidence that muscaridine (3), a quaternary amine congener related to and co-occurring with 1, does not activate the muscarinic acetylcholine receptor M3 on human embryonic kidney cells. Our work provides important insight into the metabolic profile and the pharmacology of some of the most poisonous mushrooms. As the harmless 2 can liberate the potentially fatal 1 by unspecific enzymatic ester cleavage, these results are highly relevant for emergency medicine to estimate the true toxicity of these mushrooms.
RESUMEN
Various nonribosomal peptide synthetases (NRPSs) create structural and functional diversity by incorporating α-hydroxy acids into peptide backbones. Trigonic acid, an unusual cyclopropanol-substituted hydroxy acid, is the source of the molecular warhead of malleicyprol, a critical virulence factor of human and animal pathogens of the Burkholderia pseudomallei (BP) group. The process of selecting and loading this building block remained enigmatic as the NRPS module designated for this task is incomplete. Using a combination of bioinformatics, mutational analyses, targeted metabolomics, and in vitro biochemical assays, we show that two trans-acting enzymes are required to load this central building block onto the modular assembly line. An adenylation-thiolation didomain enzyme (BurJ) activates trigonic acid, followed by the translocation of the enzyme-bound α-hydroxy acid thioester by an FkbH-like protein with a mutated phosphatase domain (BurH). This specialized gateway is the first reported direct loading of an α-hydroxy acid onto a bona fide NRPS module in bacteria and expands the synthetic biology toolbox for the site-specific incorporation of non-canonical building blocks. Moreover, insight into the biochemical basis of virulence factor biosynthesis can provide a foundation for developing enzyme inhibitors as anti-virulence therapeutics against BP pathogen infections.
Asunto(s)
Hidroxiácidos , Péptido Sintasas , Péptido Sintasas/metabolismo , Hidroxiácidos/metabolismo , Hidroxiácidos/química , Burkholderia pseudomallei/enzimología , Burkholderia pseudomallei/metabolismoRESUMEN
Cyclopropanol rings are highly reactive and may function as molecular "warheads" that affect natural product bioactivity. Yet, knowledge on their biosynthesis is limited. Using gene cluster analyses, isotope labeling, and in vitro enzyme assays, we shed first light on the biosynthesis of the cyclopropanol-substituted amino acid cleonine, a residue in the antimicrobial depsipeptide valgamicin C and the cytotoxic glycopeptide cleomycin A2. We decipher the biosynthetic origin of valgamicin C and show that the cleonine cyclopropanol ring is derived from dimethylsulfoniopropionate (DMSP). Furthermore, we demonstrate that part of the biosynthesis is analogous to the formation of malleicyprol polyketides in pathogenic bacteria. By genome mining and metabolic profiling, we identify the potential to produce cyclopropanol rings in other bacterial species. Our results reveal a general mechanism for cyclopropyl alcohol biosynthesis across diverse natural products that may be harnessed for bioengineering and drug discovery.
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Aminoácidos , Productos Biológicos , Vías Biosintéticas , Ciclopropanos , Depsipéptidos , Éteres Cíclicos , Furanos , Policétidos , Familia de MultigenesRESUMEN
Enzymes are increasingly recognized as valuable (bio)catalysts that complement existing synthetic methods. However, the range of biotransformations used in the laboratory is limited. Here we give an overview on the biosynthesis-inspired discovery of novel biocatalysts that address various synthetic challenges. Prominent examples from this dynamic field highlight remarkable enzymes for protecting-group-free amide formation and modification, control of pericyclic reactions, stereoselective hetero- and polycyclizations, atroposelective aryl couplings, site-selective C-H activations, introduction of ring strain, and N-N bond formation. We also explore unusual functions of cytochrome P450 monooxygenases, radical SAM-dependent enzymes, flavoproteins, and enzymes recruited from primary metabolism, which offer opportunities for synthetic biology, enzyme engineering, directed evolution, and catalyst design.
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Sistema Enzimático del Citocromo P-450 , Ingeniería de Proteínas , Biocatálisis , Sistema Enzimático del Citocromo P-450/metabolismo , Catálisis , Biotransformación , Enzimas/metabolismoRESUMEN
Psilocybe "magic mushrooms" are chemically well understood for their psychotropic tryptamines. However, the diversity of their other specialized metabolites, in particular terpenoids, has largely remained an open question. Yet, knowledge on the natural product background is critical to understand if other compounds modulate the psychotropic pharmacological effects. CubA, the single clade II sesquiterpene synthase of P. cubensis, was heterologously produced in Escherichia coli and characterized inâ vitro, complemented by inâ vivo product formation assays in Aspergillus niger as a heterologous host. Extensive GC-MS analyses proved a function as multi-product synthase and, depending on the reaction conditions, cubebol, ß-copaene, δ-cadinene, and germacrene D were detected as the major products of CubA. In addition, mature P. cubensis carpophores were analysed chromatographically which led to the detection of ß-copaene and δ-cadinene. Enzymes closely related to CubA are encoded in the genomes of various Psilocybe species. Therefore, our results provide insight into the metabolic capacity of the entire genus.
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Transferasas Alquil y Aril , Psilocybe , Sesquiterpenos , Psilocybe/metabolismo , Sesquiterpenos/química , Transferasas Alquil y Aril/genéticaRESUMEN
Bacterial pathogens of the Burkholderia pseudomallei (BP) group cause life-threatening infections in both humans and animals. Critical for the virulence of these often antibiotic-resistant pathogens is the polyketide hybrid metabolite malleicyprol, which features two chains, a short cyclopropanol-substituted chain and a long hydrophobic alkyl chain. The biosynthetic origin of the latter has remained unknown. Here, we report the discovery of novel overlooked malleicyprol congeners with varied chain lengths and identify medium-sized fatty acids as polyketide synthase (PKS) starter units that constitute the hydrophobic carbon tails. Mutational and biochemical analyses show that a designated coenzyme A-independent fatty acyl-adenylate ligase (FAAL, BurM) is essential for recruiting and activating fatty acids in malleicyprol biosynthesis. In vitro reconstitution of the BurM-catalyzed PKS priming reaction and analysis of ACP-bound building blocks reveal a key role of BurM in the toxin assembly. Insights into the function and role of BurM hold promise for the development of enzyme inhibitors as novel antivirulence therapeutics to combat infections with BP pathogens.
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Ácidos Grasos , Sintasas Poliquetidas , Animales , Humanos , Antibacterianos/farmacología , Bacterias/metabolismo , Sintasas Poliquetidas/metabolismoRESUMEN
An essential step in the biosynthesis of polyketide and non-ribosomal peptide natural products is cleavage of the thioester bond that tethers the acyl/peptidyl chain to its biosynthetic enzyme. In modular polyketide synthases (PKS) and non-ribosomal peptide synthetases (NRPS) chain release is typically catalysed by a single C-terminal thioesterase domain. A clear exception is the bimodular PKS-NRPS BurA that produces gonyol-an intermediate in the biosynthesis of the cytotoxic Burkholderia virulence factor malleicyprol. While BurA lacks a C-terminal thioesterase domain, making the mechanism by which gonyol is released unclear, it contains two uncommon non-C-terminal thioesterase domains: one at the N-terminus of module one (BurA TE-A) and one within module two (BurA TE-B). Here we show using a sequence similarity network and site-directed mutagenesis that BurA TE-A resembles proofreading type II thioesterases and is not essential for gonyol biosynthesis, indicating a hydrolytic proofreading role. In contrast, the intramodular BurA TE-B is essential and catalyses the hydrolytic release of gonyol. Furthermore, unlike typical type I thioesterase domains, BurA TE-B accepts its acyl substrate from a downstream carrier-protein domain as opposed to an upstream one. Our findings clarify an important step in malleicyprol biosynthesis, reveal the flexibility of thioesterase domain positioning, and will serve as a basis for understanding other intramodular thioesterase domains.
RESUMEN
Nonribosomal peptide synthetases (NRPSs) are a vast source of valuable natural products, and re-engineering them is an attractive path toward structurally diversified active compounds. NRPS engineering often requires heterologous expression, which is hindered by the enormous size of NRPS proteins. Protein splitting and docking domain insertion have been proposed as a strategy to overcome this limitation. Here, we have applied the splitting strategy to the gramicidin S NRPS: Despite better production of the split proteins, gramicidin S production almost ceased. However, the addition of type II thioesterase GrsT boosted production. GrsT is an enzyme encoded in the gramicidin S biosynthetic gene cluster that we have produced and characterized for this purpose. We attribute the activity enhancement to the removal of a stalled intermediate from the split NRPS that is formed due to misinitiation. These results highlight type II thioesterases as useful tools for NRPS engineering.
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Productos Biológicos , Gramicidina , Productos Biológicos/química , Familia de Multigenes , Péptido Sintasas/metabolismoRESUMEN
Bacteria of the Burkholderia pseudomallei (BP) group pose a global health threat, causing the infectious diseases melioidosis, a common cause of pneumonia and sepsis, and glanders, a contagious zoonosis. A trait of BP bacteria is a conserved gene cluster coding for the biosynthesis of polyketides (malleicyprols) with a reactive cyclopropanol unit that is critical for virulence. Enzymes building this warhead represent ideal targets for antivirulence strategies but the biochemical basis of cyclopropanol formation is unknown. Here we describe the formation of the malleicyprol warhead. We show that BurG, an unusual NAD+-dependent member of the ketol-acid reductoisomerase family, constructs the strained cyclopropanol ring. Biochemical assays and a suite of eight crystal structures of native and mutated BurG with bound analogues and inhibitors provide snapshots of each step of the complex reaction mechanism, involving a concealed oxidoreduction and a C-S bond cleavage. Our findings illustrate a remarkable case of neofunctionalisation, where a biocatalyst from central metabolism has been evolutionarily repurposed for warhead production in pathogens.
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Burkholderia mallei , Burkholderia pseudomallei , Muermo , Animales , Bacterias , Burkholderia mallei/genética , Burkholderia pseudomallei/genética , Éteres Cíclicos , Muermo/microbiología , Muermo/patología , CaballosRESUMEN
Psilocybin (1) is the major alkaloid found in psychedelic mushrooms and acts as a prodrug to psilocin (2, 4-hydroxy-N,N-dimethyltryptamine), a potent psychedelic that exerts remarkable alteration of human consciousness. In contrast, the positional isomer bufotenin (7, 5-hydroxy-N,N-dimethyltryptamine) differs significantly in its reported pharmacology. A series of experiments was designed to explore chemical differences between 2 and 7 and specifically to test the hypothesis that the C-4 hydroxy group of 2 significantly influences the observed physical and chemical properties through pseudo-ring formation via an intramolecular hydrogen bond (IMHB). NMR spectroscopy, accompanied by quantum chemical calculations, was employed to compare hydrogen bond behavior in 4- and 5-hydroxylated tryptamines. The results provide evidence for a pseudo-ring in 2 and that sidechain/hydroxyl interactions in 4-hydroxytryptamines influence their oxidation kinetics. We conclude that the propensity to form IMHBs leads to a higher number of uncharged species that easily cross the blood-brain barrier, compared to 7 and other 5-hydroxytryptamines, which cannot form IMHBs. Our work helps understand a fundamental aspect of the pharmacology of 2 and should support efforts to introduce it (via the prodrug 1) as an urgently needed therapeutic against major depressive disorder.
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Trastorno Depresivo Mayor , Alucinógenos , Profármacos , Alucinógenos/farmacología , Humanos , Psilocibina/análogos & derivados , TriptaminasRESUMEN
Pathogenic bacteria of the Burkholderia pseudomallei group cause severe infectious diseases such as glanders and melioidosis. Malleicyprols were identified as important bacterial virulence factors, yet the biosynthetic origin of their cyclopropanol warhead has remained enigmatic. By a combination of mutational analysis and metabolomics we found that sulfonium acids, dimethylsulfoniumpropionate (DMSP) and gonyol, known as osmolytes and as crucial components in the global organosulfur cycle, are key intermediates en route to the cyclopropanol unit. Functional genetics and inâ vitro analyses uncover a specialized pathway to DMSP involving a rare prokaryotic SET-domain methyltransferase for a cryptic methylation, and show that DMSP is loaded onto the NRPS-PKS hybrid assembly line by an adenylation domain dedicated to zwitterionic starter units. Then, the megasynthase transforms DMSP into gonyol, as demonstrated by heterologous pathway reconstitution in E. coli.
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Burkholderia/química , Ciclopropanos/metabolismo , Propanoles/metabolismo , Compuestos de Sulfonio/metabolismo , Factores de Virulencia/biosíntesis , Secuencia de Aminoácidos , Proteínas Bacterianas/metabolismo , Burkholderia/enzimología , Péptido Sintasas/metabolismo , Sintasas Poliquetidas/metabolismo , Alineación de SecuenciaRESUMEN
The psychotropic effects of Psilocybe "magic" mushrooms are caused by the l-tryptophan-derived alkaloid psilocybin. Despite their significance, the secondary metabolome of these fungi is poorly understood in general. Our analysis of four Psilocybe species identified harmane, harmine, and a range of other l-tryptophan-derived ß-carbolines as their natural products, which was confirmed by 1D and 2D NMR spectroscopy. Stable-isotope labeling with 13 C11 -l-tryptophan verified the ß-carbolines as biosynthetic products of these fungi. In addition, MALDI-MS imaging showed that ß-carbolines accumulate toward the hyphal apices. As potent inhibitors of monoamine oxidases, ß-carbolines are neuroactive compounds and interfere with psilocybin degradation. Therefore, our findings represent an unprecedented scenario of natural product pathways that diverge from the same building block and produce dissimilar compounds, yet contribute directly or indirectly to the same pharmacological effects.
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Agaricales/metabolismo , Alcaloides/química , Carbolinas/química , Inhibidores de la Monoaminooxidasa/química , Monoaminooxidasa/metabolismo , Psilocibina/química , Triptófano/química , Agaricales/química , Monoaminooxidasa/químicaRESUMEN
Burkholderia species such as B. mallei and B. pseudomallei are bacterial pathogens causing fatal infections in humans and animals (glanders and melioidosis), yet knowledge on their virulence factors is limited. While pathogenic effects have been linked to a highly conserved gene locus (bur/mal) in the B. mallei group, the metabolite associated to the encoded polyketide synthase, burkholderic acid (syn. malleilactone), could not explain the observed phenotypes. By metabolic profiling and molecular network analyses of the model organism B. thailandensis, the primary products of the cryptic pathway were identified as unusual cyclopropanol-substituted polyketides. First, sulfomalleicyprols were identified as inactive precursors of burkholderic acid. Furthermore, a highly reactive upstream metabolite, malleicyprol, was discovered and obtained in two stabilized forms. Cell-based assays and a nematode infection model showed that the rare natural product confers cytotoxicity and virulence.
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Burkholderia/metabolismo , Éteres Cíclicos/metabolismo , Policétidos/metabolismo , Factores de Virulencia/metabolismo , Animales , Burkholderia/genética , Burkholderia/patogenicidad , Caenorhabditis elegans/efectos de los fármacos , Proliferación Celular/efectos de los fármacos , Éteres Cíclicos/química , Éteres Cíclicos/farmacología , Células Endoteliales de la Vena Umbilical Humana/efectos de los fármacos , Humanos , Células K562 , Estructura Molecular , Policétidos/química , Policétidos/farmacología , Virulencia , Factores de Virulencia/química , Factores de Virulencia/farmacologíaRESUMEN
In microbial interactions bacteria employ diverse molecules with specific functions, such as sensing the environment, communication with other microbes or hosts, and conferring virulence. Insights into the molecular basis of bacterial communication are thus of high relevance for ecology and medicine. Targeted gene activation and in vitro studies revealed that the cell-to-cell signaling molecule and disease mediator IQS (aeruginaldehyde) of the human pathogen Pseudomonas aeruginosa and related bacteria derives from the siderophore pyochelin. Addition of IQS to bacterial cultures (Burkholderia thailandensis) showed that the signaling molecule is captured by a congener of another siderophore family, malleobactin, to form a nitrone conjugate (malleonitrone) that is active against the IQS-producer. This study uncovers complex communication processes with derailed siderophore functions, a novel nitrone bioconjugation, and a new type of antibiotic against Gram-negative bacteria.
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Proteínas Bacterianas/química , Óxidos de Nitrógeno/química , Sideróforos/químicaRESUMEN
The attine ants of South and Central America are ancient farmers, having evolved a symbiosis with a fungal food crop >50 million years ago. The most evolutionarily derived attines are the Atta and Acromyrmex leafcutter ants, which harvest fresh leaves to feed their fungus. Acromyrmex and many other attines vertically transmit a mutualistic strain of Pseudonocardia and use antifungal compounds made by these bacteria to protect their fungal partner against co-evolved fungal pathogens of the genus Escovopsis. Pseudonocardia mutualists associated with the attines Apterostigma dentigerum and Trachymyrmex cornetzi make novel cyclic depsipeptide compounds called gerumycins, while a mutualist strain isolated from derived Acromyrmex octospinosus makes an unusual polyene antifungal called nystatin P1. The novelty of these antimicrobials suggests there is merit in exploring secondary metabolites of Pseudonocardia on a genome-wide scale. Here, we report a genomic analysis of the Pseudonocardia phylotypes Ps1 and Ps2 that are consistently associated with Acromyrmex ants collected in Gamboa, Panama. These were previously distinguished solely on the basis of 16S rRNA gene sequencing but genome sequencing of five Ps1 and five Ps2 strains revealed that the phylotypes are distinct species and each encodes between 11 and 15 secondary metabolite biosynthetic gene clusters (BGCs). There are signature BGCs for Ps1 and Ps2 strains and some that are conserved in both. Ps1 strains all contain BGCs encoding nystatin P1-like antifungals, while the Ps2 strains encode novel nystatin-like molecules. Strains show variations in the arrangement of these BGCs that resemble those seen in gerumycin gene clusters. Genome analyses and invasion assays support our hypothesis that vertically transmitted Ps1 and Ps2 strains have antibacterial activity that could help shape the cuticular microbiome. Thus, our work defines the Pseudonocardia species associated with Acromyrmex ants and supports the hypothesis that Pseudonocardia species could provide a valuable source of new antimicrobials.