RESUMO
Non-ribosomal peptide synthetases (NRPSs) generate chemically complex compounds and their modular architecture suggests that changing their domain organization can predictably alter their products. Ebony, a small three-domain NRPS, catalyzes the formation of ß-alanine containing amides from biogenic amines. To examine the necessity of interdomain interactions, we modeled and docked domains of Ebony to reveal potential interfaces between them. Testing the same domain combinations in vitro showed that 8 % of activity was preserved after Ebony was dissected into a di-domain and a detached C-terminal domain, suggesting that sufficient interaction was maintained after dissection. Our work creates a model to identify domain interfaces necessary for catalysis, an important step toward utilizing Ebony as a combinatorial engineering platform for novel amides.
Assuntos
Amidas , Peptídeo Sintases , Peptídeo Sintases/químicaRESUMO
Fatty acids are essential to most organisms and are made endogenously by the fatty acid synthase (FAS). FAS is an attractive target for antibiotics and many inhibitors are in clinical development. However, some gram-negative bacteria harbor an enzyme known as the acyl-acyl carrier protein synthetase (AasS), which allows them to scavenge fatty acids from the environment and shuttle them into FAS and ultimately lipids. The ability of AasS to recycle fatty acids may help pathogenic gram-negative bacteria circumvent FAS inhibition. We therefore set out to design and synthesize an inhibitor of AasS and test its effectiveness on an AasS enzyme from Vibrio harveyi, the most well studied AasS to date, and from Vibrio cholerae, a pathogenic model. The inhibitor C10-AMS [5'-O-(N-decanylsulfamoyl)adenosine], which mimics the tightly bound acyl-AMP reaction intermediate, was able to effectively inhibit AasS catalytic activity in vitro. Additionally, C10-AMS stopped the ability of Vibrio cholerae to recycle fatty acids from media and survive when its endogenous FAS was inhibited with cerulenin. C10-AMS can be used to study fatty acid recycling in other bacteria as more AasS enzymes continue to be annotated and provides a platform for potential antibiotic development.