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1.
bioRxiv ; 2024 May 02.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38168313

ABSTRACT

Actinobacteria, the bacterial phylum most renowned for natural product discovery, has been established as a valuable source for drug discovery and biotechnology but is underrepresented within accessible genome and strain collections. Herein, we introduce the Natural Products Discovery Center (NPDC), featuring 122,449 strains assembled over eight decades, the genomes of the first 8490 NPDC strains (7142 Actinobacteria), and the online NPDC Portal making both strains and genomes publicly available. A comparative survey of RefSeq and NPDC Actinobacteria highlights the taxonomic and biosynthetic diversity within the NPDC collection, including three new genera, hundreds of new species, and ~7000 new gene cluster families. Selected examples demonstrate how the NPDC Portal's strain metadata, genomes, and biosynthetic gene clusters can be leveraged using genome mining approaches. Our findings underscore the ongoing significance of Actinobacteria in natural product discovery, and the NPDC serves as an unparalleled resource for both Actinobacteria strains and genomes.

2.
Trends Pharmacol Sci ; 41(1): 13-26, 2020 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31822352

ABSTRACT

Bacterial natural products (NPs) and their analogs constitute more than half of the new small molecule drugs developed over the past few decades. Despite this success, interest in natural products from major pharmaceutical companies has decreased even as genomics has uncovered the large number of biosynthetic gene clusters (BGCs) that encode for novel natural products. To date, there is still a lack of universal strategies and enabling technologies to discover natural products at scale and speed. This review highlights several of the opportunities provided by genome sequencing and bioinformatics, challenges associated with translating genomes into natural products, and examples of successful strain prioritization and BGC activation strategies that have been used in the genomic era for natural product discovery from cultivatable bacteria.


Subject(s)
Bacteria/genetics , Biological Products/isolation & purification , Bacteria/chemistry , Bacteria/metabolism , Biological Products/chemistry , Biological Products/pharmacology , Computational Biology/methods , Drug Discovery/methods , Genome, Bacterial , Humans , Small Molecule Libraries/chemistry , Small Molecule Libraries/isolation & purification , Small Molecule Libraries/pharmacology
3.
Chem Commun (Camb) ; 56(1): 157-160, 2019 Dec 17.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31799975

ABSTRACT

Modular polyketide synthases (PKSs) are enzymatic assembly lines that fuse carbon fragments into complex chiral products. Here, their synthetic logic is employed to chemoenzymatically generate two-stereocenter triketides. Each of the four stereoisomers was constructed in a stereocontrolled manner using C-acylation and two PKS ketoreductases possessing opposite stereoselectivities.


Subject(s)
Alcohol Oxidoreductases/chemistry , Polyketide Synthases/chemistry , Polyketides/chemical synthesis , Fungal Proteins/chemistry , Stereoisomerism
4.
J Am Chem Soc ; 141(31): 12406-12412, 2019 08 07.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31291107

ABSTRACT

Nonheme diiron monooxygenases make up a rapidly growing family of oxygenases that are rarely identified in secondary metabolism. Herein, we report the in vivo, in vitro, and structural characterizations of a nonheme diiron monooxygenase, PtmU3, that installs a C-5 ß-hydroxyl group in the unified biosynthesis of platensimycin and platencin, two highly functionalized diterpenoids that act as potent and selective inhibitors of bacterial and mammalian fatty acid synthases. This hydroxylation sets the stage for the subsequent A-ring cleavage step key to the unique diterpene-derived scaffolds of platensimycin and platencin. PtmU3 adopts an unprecedented triosephosphate isomerase (TIM) barrel structural fold for this class of enzymes and possesses a noncanonical diiron active site architecture with a saturated six-coordinate iron center lacking a µ-oxo bridge. This study reveals the first member of a previously unidentified superfamily of TIM-barrel-fold enzymes for metal-dependent dioxygen activation, with the majority predicted to act on CoA-linked substrates, thus expanding our knowledge of nature's repertoire of nonheme diiron monooxygenases and TIM-barrel-fold enzymes.


Subject(s)
Adamantane/metabolism , Aminobenzoates/metabolism , Aminophenols/metabolism , Anilides/metabolism , Iron/metabolism , Mixed Function Oxygenases/chemistry , Mixed Function Oxygenases/metabolism , Polycyclic Compounds/metabolism , Catalytic Domain , Crystallography, X-Ray , Hydroxylation , Models, Molecular
5.
J Am Chem Soc ; 141(9): 4043-4050, 2019 03 06.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30735041

ABSTRACT

Platensimycin (PTM) and platencin (PTN) are highly functionalized bacterial diterpenoids of ent-kauranol and ent-atiserene biosynthetic origin. C7 oxidation in the B-ring plays a key biosynthetic role in generating structural complexity known for ent-kaurane and ent-atisane derived diterpenoids. While all three oxidation patterns, α-hydroxyl, ß-hydroxyl, and ketone, at C7 are seen in both the ent-kaurane and ent-atisane derived diterpenoids, their biosynthetic origins remain largely unknown. We previously established that PTM and PTN are produced by a single biosynthetic machinery, featuring cryptic C7 oxidations at the B-rings that transform the ent-kauranol and ent-atiserene derived precursors into the characteristic PTM and PTN scaffolds. Here, we report a three-enzyme cascade affording C7 α-hydroxylation in PTM and PTN biosynthesis. Combining in vitro and in vivo studies, we show that PtmO3 and PtmO6 are two functionally redundant α-ketoglutarate-dependent dioxygenases that generate a cryptic C7 ß-hydroxyl on each of the ent-kauranol and ent-atiserene scaffolds, and PtmO8 and PtmO1, a pair of NAD+/NADPH-dependent dehydrogenases, subsequently work in concert to invert the C7 ß-hydroxyl to α-hydroxyl via a C7 ketone intermediate. PtmO3 and PtmO6 represent the first dedicated C7 ß-hydroxylases characterized to date and, together with PtmO8 and PtmO1, provide an account for the biosynthetic origins of all three C7 oxidation patterns that may shed light on other B-ring modifications in bacterial, plant, and fungal diterpenoid biosynthesis. Given their unprecedented activities in C7 oxidations, PtmO3, PtmO6, PtmO8, and PtmO1 enrich the growing toolbox of novel enzymes that could be exploited as biocatalysts to rapidly access complex diterpenoid natural products.


Subject(s)
Adamantane/metabolism , Aminobenzoates/metabolism , Aminophenols/metabolism , Anilides/metabolism , Polycyclic Compounds/metabolism , Adamantane/chemistry , Aminobenzoates/chemistry , Aminophenols/chemistry , Anilides/chemistry , Hydroxylation , Molecular Conformation , Oxidation-Reduction , Polycyclic Compounds/chemistry , Stereoisomerism
6.
Org Biomol Chem ; 17(6): 1375-1378, 2019 02 06.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30652175

ABSTRACT

Economical and environmentally-friendly routes to convert feedstock chemicals like acetate into valuable chiral products such as (R)-3-hydroxybutyrate are in demand. Here, seven enzymes (CoaA, CoaD, CoaE, ACS, BktB, PhaB, and GDH) are employed in a one-pot, in vitro, biocatalytic synthesis of (3R)-3-hydroxybutyryl-CoA, which was readily isolated. This platform generates not only chiral diketide building blocks but also desirable CoA derivatives.


Subject(s)
Acyl Coenzyme A/chemistry , Biocatalysis , Enzymes/metabolism
7.
ACS Chem Biol ; 13(4): 975-983, 2018 04 20.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29481043

ABSTRACT

trans-Acyltransferase assembly lines possess enzymatic domains often not observed in their better characterized cis-acyltransferase counterparts. Within this repertoire of largely unexplored biosynthetic machinery is a class of enzymes called the pyran synthases that catalyze the formation of five- and six-membered cyclic ethers from diverse polyketide chains. The 1.55 Å resolution crystal structure of a pyran synthase domain excised from the ninth module of the sorangicin assembly line highlights the similarity of this enzyme to the ubiquitous dehydratase domain and provides insight into the mechanism of ring formation. Functional assays of point mutants reveal the central importance of the active site histidine that is shared with the dehydratases as well as the supporting role of a neighboring semiconserved asparagine.


Subject(s)
Acyltransferases/metabolism , Polyketide Synthases/metabolism , Catalytic Domain , Crystallography, X-Ray , Hydro-Lyases/chemistry , Protein Domains
8.
Langmuir ; 33(14): 3413-3426, 2017 04 11.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28277669

ABSTRACT

Reversible NIR-active nanoparticle clusters with controlled size from 20 to 100 nm were assembled from 5 nm gold nanoparticles (Au NP), with either citrate (CIT) or various binary ligands on the surface, by tuning the electrostatic repulsion and the hydrogen bonding via pH. The nanoclusters were bound together by vdW forces between the cores and the hydrogen bonds between the surface ligands and dissociated to primary nanoparticles over a period of 20 days at pH 5 and at pH 7. When high levels of citrate ligands were used on the primary particle surfaces, the large particle spacings in the nanoclusters led to only modest NIR extinction. However, a NIR extinction (E1000/525) ratio of up to ∼0.4 was obtained for nanoclusters with binary ligand mixtures composed of citrate and either cysteine (CYS), glutathione (GSH), or thioctic acid zwitterion (TAZ) while maintaining full reversibility to primary particles. The optimum ligand ratio for both an E1000/525 of ∼0.4 and full reversibility decreased with increasing length of the secondary ligand (1.5/1 for CYS/CIT, 0.75/1 for GSH/CIT, and 0.5/1 for TAZ/CIT) because a longer secondary ligand maintains a sufficient interparticle spacing required for dissociation more effectively. Interestingly, the zeta potential and the first-order rate constant for nanocluster dissociation were similar for all three systems at the optimum ligand ratios. After incubation in 10 mM GSH solution (intracellular concentration), only the TAZ/CIT primary nanoparticles were resistant to protein opsonization in 100% fetal bovine serum, as the bidentate binding and zwitterion tips of TAZ resisted GSH exchange and protein opsonization, respectively.

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