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1.
Science ; 279(5348): 199-202, 1998 Jan 09.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-9422686

RESUMO

The wide-specificity loading module for the avermectin-producing polyketide synthase was grafted onto the first multienzyme component (DEBS1) of the erythromycin-producing polyketide synthase in place of the normal loading module. Expression of this hybrid enzyme in the erythromycin producer Saccharopolyspora erythraea produced several novel antibiotic erythromycins derived from endogenous branched-chain acid starter units typical of natural avermectins. Because the avermectin polyketide synthase is known to accept more than 40 alternative carboxylic acids as starter units, this approach opens the way to facile production of novel analogs of antibiotic macrolides.


Assuntos
Antibacterianos/biossíntese , Eritromicina/análogos & derivados , Complexos Multienzimáticos/genética , Complexos Multienzimáticos/metabolismo , Engenharia de Proteínas , Ácidos Carboxílicos/metabolismo , Clonagem Molecular , Eritromicina/biossíntese , Fermentação , Ivermectina/análogos & derivados , Ivermectina/metabolismo , Complexos Multienzimáticos/química , Regiões Promotoras Genéticas , Multimerização Proteica , Saccharopolyspora/enzimologia , Streptomyces/enzimologia , Especificidade por Substrato
2.
Science ; 263(5145): 378-80, 1994 Jan 21.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-8278811

RESUMO

During assembly of complex polyketide antibiotics like erythromycin A, molecular recognition by the multienzyme polyketide synthase controls the stereochemical outcome as each successive methylmalonyl-coenzyme A (CoA) extender unit is added. Acylation of the purified erythromycin-producing polyketide synthase has shown that all six acyltransferase domains have identical stereospecificity for their normal substrate, (2S)-methylmalonyl-CoA. In contrast, the configuration of the methyl-branched centers in the product, that are derived from (2S)-methylmalonyl-CoA, is different. Stereoselection during the chain building process must, therefore, involve additional epimerization steps.


Assuntos
Acil Coenzima A/metabolismo , Eritromicina/biossíntese , Complexos Multienzimáticos/metabolismo , Acetilcoenzima A/metabolismo , Malonil Coenzima A/metabolismo , Conformação Molecular , Complexos Multienzimáticos/química , Racemases e Epimerases/metabolismo , Saccharopolyspora/enzimologia , Estereoisomerismo , Especificidade por Substrato
3.
Science ; 268(5216): 1487-9, 1995 Jun 09.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-7770773

RESUMO

Macrocyclic polyketides exhibit an impressive range of medically useful activities, and there is great interest in manipulating the genes that govern their synthesis. The 6-deoxyerythronolide B synthase (DEBS) of Saccharopolyspora erythraea, which synthesizes the aglycone core of the antibiotic erythromycin A, has been modified by repositioning of a chain-terminating cyclase domain to the carboxyl-terminus of DEBS1, the multienzyme that catalyzes the first two rounds of polyketide chain extension. The resulting mutant markedly accelerates formation of the predicted triketide lactone, compared to a control in which the repositioned domain is inactive. Repositioning of the cyclase should be generally useful for redirecting polyketide synthesis to obtain polyketides of specified chain lengths.


Assuntos
Complexos Multienzimáticos/metabolismo , Engenharia de Proteínas , Saccharopolyspora/enzimologia , Sequência de Bases , Sítios de Ligação , Clonagem Molecular , Eritromicina/biossíntese , Genes Bacterianos , Vetores Genéticos , Dados de Sequência Molecular , Complexos Multienzimáticos/química , Complexos Multienzimáticos/genética , Saccharopolyspora/genética , Transformação Genética
4.
Structure ; 4(3): 339-50, 1996 Mar 15.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-8805541

RESUMO

BACKGROUND: The enzyme methylmalonyl-coenzyme A (CoA) mutase, an alphabeta heterodimer of 150 kDa, is a member of a class of enzymes that uses coenzyme B12 (adenosylcobalamin) as a cofactor. The enzyme induces the formation of an adenosyl radical from the cofactor. This radical then initiates a free-radical rearrangement of its substrate, succinyl-CoA, to methylmalonyl-CoA. RESULTS: Reported here is the crystal structure at 2 A resolution of methylmalonyl-CoA mutase from Propionibacterium shermanii in complex with coenzyme B12 and with the partial substrate desulpho-CoA (lacking the succinyl group and the sulphur atom of the substrate). The coenzyme is bound by a domain which shares a similar fold to those of flavodoxin and the B12-binding domain of methylcobalamin-dependent methionine synthase. The cobalt atom is coordinated, via a long bond, to a histidine from the protein. The partial substrate is bound along the axis of a (beta/alpha)8 TIM barrel domain. CONCLUSIONS: The histidine-cobalt distance is very long (2.5 A compared with 1.95-2.2 A in free cobalamins), suggesting that the enzyme positions the histidine in order to weaken the metal-carbon bond of the cofactor and favour the formation of the initial radical species. The active site is deeply buried, and the only access to it is through a narrow tunnel along the axis of the TIM barrel domain.


Assuntos
Cobamidas/metabolismo , Metilmalonil-CoA Mutase/química , Sítios de Ligação , Cristalização , Cristalografia por Raios X , Radicais Livres/metabolismo , Ligantes , Modelos Moleculares , Propionibacterium/enzimologia , Estrutura Secundária de Proteína , Especificidade por Substrato
5.
Chem Sci ; 7(1): 376-385, 2016 Jan 01.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28791099

RESUMO

Thiolactomycin (TLM) is a thiotetronate antibiotic that selectively targets bacterial fatty acid biosynthesis through inhibition of the ß-ketoacyl-acyl carrier protein synthases (KASI/II) that catalyse chain elongation on the type II (dissociated) fatty acid synthase. It has proved effective in in vivo infection models of Mycobacterium tuberculosis and continues to attract interest as a template for drug discovery. We have used a comparative genomics approach to uncover the (hitherto elusive) biosynthetic pathway to TLM and related thiotetronates. Analysis of the whole-genome sequence of Streptomyces olivaceus Tü 3010 producing the more ramified thiotetronate Tü 3010 provided initial evidence that such thiotetronates are assembled by a novel iterative polyketide synthase-nonribosomal peptide synthetase, and revealed the identity of other pathway enzymes, encoded by adjacent genes. Subsequent genome sequencing of three other thiotetronate-producing actinomycetes, including the Lentzea sp. ATCC 31319 that produces TLM, confirmed that near-identical clusters were also present in these genomes. In-frame gene deletion within the cluster for Tü 3010 from Streptomyces thiolactonus NRRL 15439, or within the TLM cluster, led to loss of production of the respective thiotetronate, confirming their identity. Each cluster houses at least one gene encoding a KASI/II enzyme, suggesting plausible mechanisms for self-resistance. A separate genetic locus encodes a cysteine desulfurase and a (thiouridylase-like) sulfur transferase to supply the sulfur atom for thiotetronate ring formation. Transfer of the main Tü 3010 gene cluster (stu gene cluster) into Streptomyces avermitilis led to heterologous production of this thiotetronate, showing that an equivalent sulfur donor can be supplied by this host strain. Mutational analysis of the Tü 3010 and TLM clusters has revealed the unexpected role of a cytochrome P450 enzyme in thiotetronate ring formation. These insights have allowed us to propose a mechanism for sulfur insertion, and have opened the way to engineering of the biosynthesis of TLM and other thiotetronates to produce novel analogues.

6.
Biochim Biophys Acta ; 660(2): 271-7, 1981 Aug 13.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-7284404

RESUMO

Diethyl pyrocarbonate inactivates enoyl-CoA hydratase (L-3-hydroxyacyl-CoA hydro-lyase, EC 4.2.1.17) with a second-order rate constant of 1.3 M-1 X s-1. Partial protection is given against inactivation by the substrate analogue acetoacetyl-CoA. The single histidine per enzyme subunit is completely modified at a rate considerably faster than inactivation, and enzymatic activity is not restored by treatment with hydroxylamine. No tyrosine, cysteine or tryptophan residues are modified by diethyl pyrocarbonate. However, out of the 22 amino groups per subunit, 2-5 groups do react with diethyl pyrocarbonate, as shown by difference titration with methyl [1-14C]-acetimidate. Destruction of N-terminal serine residue by periodate oxidation lowers, but does not abolish enzyme activity. Experiments using 3H-labelled diethyl pyrocarbonate show that the loss of 85% of the original activity is accompanied by the incorporation of approx. three carbethoxy groups. One amino acid residue reacts much faster than the others, and is not essential for activity. Of the next two groups reacting, one is apparently essential for activity. Modification with diethyl pyrocarbonate does not lead to any gross changes in the structure of the enzyme. These experiments taken together show that, in contrast to other hydratases, histidine is not involved in the catalytic mechanism of enoyl-CoA hydratase, and suggest that a single residue is important for activity.


Assuntos
Acil Coenzima A , Dietil Pirocarbonato/farmacologia , Enoil-CoA Hidratase/antagonistas & inibidores , Formiatos/farmacologia , Hidroliases/antagonistas & inibidores , Acetilcoenzima A/análogos & derivados , Acetilcoenzima A/farmacologia , Animais , Bovinos , Fenômenos Químicos , Química , Histidina/metabolismo , Cinética , Espectrofotometria Ultravioleta , Trítio
7.
Curr Opin Chem Biol ; 1(2): 162-8, 1997 Aug.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-9734993

RESUMO

Polyketides are a large and structurally diverse family of natural products based on chains of carboxylic acid units. The polyketide synthases that make aromatic polyketides have already been used to generate small combinatorial libraries, by expressing individual genes from different biosynthetic pathways together, so that the enzymes they encode can interact to make novel products. Recent work has shown how to choose these individual components to increase the chances of obtaining such hybrid aromatic compounds. In other polyketide synthases which synthesise complex reduced polyketides, the constituent enzymes are actually linked as domains in a giant multienzyme complex along which the growing polyketide chain is passed. A combinatorial approach here therefore requires the fusing together of individual enzymatic domains from several such synthases in as many productive ways as can be devised, so that the enzyme assembly line produces a library of altered products. A key recent advance has been to demonstrate that such genuinely hybrid enzymes do work as predicted, for example a broad-specificity enzyme that recruits the chain starter unit for an antiparasitic compound has been grafted onto a synthase that makes antimicrobial macrolides.


Assuntos
Biotecnologia/tendências , Desenho de Fármacos , Complexos Multienzimáticos/biossíntese , Engenharia de Proteínas , Carboxiliases/biossíntese , Humanos
8.
J Mol Biol ; 200(2): 421-2, 1988 Mar 20.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-2897473

RESUMO

Pink crystals of methylmalonyl-CoA mutase from Propionibacterium shermanii, a coenzyme B12 (5'-deoxyadenosylcobalamin)-dependent enzyme, have been obtained by the hanging-drop method in two different forms. One form lies in the space group P21, with unit cell dimensions a = 122 A, b = 160 A and c = 90 A, with beta = 104 degrees (1 A = 0.1 nm). There are two alpha beta dimers in the asymmetric unit. The crystals diffract to 3.2 A resolution and are suitable for high resolution X-ray diffraction studies.


Assuntos
Isomerases , Metilmalonil-CoA Mutase , Propionibacterium/enzimologia , Cristalização , Difração de Raios X
9.
Chem Biol ; 8(2): 207-20, 2001 Feb.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-11251294

RESUMO

BACKGROUND: Modular polyketide synthases (PKSs) function as molecular assembly lines in which polyketide chains are assembled by successive addition of chain extension units. At the end of the assembly line, there is usually a covalently linked type I thioesterase domain (TE I), which is responsible for release of the completed acyl chain from its covalent link to the synthase. Additionally, some PKS clusters contain a second thioesterase gene (TE II) for which there is no established role. Disruption of the TE II genes from several PKS clusters has shown that the TE II plays an important role in maintaining normal levels of antibiotic production. It has been suggested that the TE II fulfils this role by removing aberrant intermediates that might otherwise block the PKS complex. RESULTS: We show that recombinant tylosin TE II behaves in vitro as a TE towards a variety of N-acetylcysteamine and p-nitrophenyl esters. The trends of hydrolytic activity determined by the kinetic parameter k(cat)/K(M) for the analogues tested indicates that simple fatty acyl chains are effective substrates. Analogues that modelled aberrant forms of putative tylosin biosynthetic intermediates were hydrolysed at low rates. CONCLUSIONS: The behaviour of tylosin TE II in vitro is consistent with its proposed role as an editing enzyme. Aberrant decarboxylation of a malonate-derived moiety attached to an acyl carrier protein (ACP) domain may generate an acetate, propionate or butyrate residue on the ACP thiol. Our results suggest that removal of such groups is a significant role of TE II.


Assuntos
Ácido Graxo Sintases/química , Tioléster Hidrolases/química , Ácidos Carboxílicos/química , Ácido Graxo Sintases/metabolismo , Peso Molecular , Complexos Multienzimáticos/química , Especificidade por Substrato , Tioléster Hidrolases/metabolismo
10.
Chem Biol ; 8(12): 1197-208, 2001 Dec.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-11755398

RESUMO

BACKGROUND: Polyketides are structurally diverse natural products with a wide range of useful activities. Bacterial modular polyketide synthases (PKSs) catalyse the production of non-aromatic polyketides using a different set of enzymes for each successive cycle of chain extension. The choice of starter unit is governed by the substrate specificity of a distinct loading module. The unusual loading module of the soraphen modular PKS, from the myxobacterium Sorangium cellulosum, specifies a benzoic acid starter unit. Attempts to design functional hybrid PKSs using this loading module provide a stringent test of our understanding of PKS structure and function, since the order of the domains in the loading and first extension module is non-canonical in the soraphen PKS, and the producing strain is not an actinomycete. RESULTS: We have constructed bimodular PKSs based on DEBS1-TE, a derivative of the erythromycin PKS that contains only extension modules 1 and 2 and a thioesterase (TE) domain, by substituting one or more domains from the soraphen PKS. A hybrid PKS containing the soraphen acyltransferase domain AT1b instead of extension acyltransferase domain AT1 produced triketide lactones lacking a methyl group at C-4, as expected if AT1b catalyses the addition of malonyl-CoA during the first extension cycle on the soraphen PKS. Substitution of the DEBS1-TE loading module AT domain by the soraphen AT1a domain led to the production of 5-phenyl-substituted triketide lactone, as well as the normal products of DEBS1-TE. This 5-phenyl triketide lactone was also the product of a hybrid PKS containing the entire soraphen PKS loading module as well as part of its first extension module. Phenyl-substituted lactone was only produced when measures were simultaneously taken to increase the intracellular supply of benzoyl-CoA in the host strain of Saccharopolyspora erythraea. CONCLUSIONS: These results demonstrate that the ability to recruit a benzoate starter unit can be conferred on a modular PKS by the transfer either of a single AT domain, or of multiple domains to produce a chimaeric first extension module, from the soraphen PKS. However, benzoyl-CoA needs to be provided within the cell as a specific precursor. The data also support the respective roles previously assigned to the adjacent AT domains of the soraphen loading/first extension module. Construction of such hybrid actinomycete-myxobacterial enzymes should significantly extend the synthetic repertoire of modular PKSs.


Assuntos
Macrolídeos , Complexos Multienzimáticos/química , Myxococcales/enzimologia , Iniciação Traducional da Cadeia Peptídica , Sequência de Aminoácidos , Compostos Heterocíclicos , Cinética , Dados de Sequência Molecular , Complexos Multienzimáticos/genética , Complexos Multienzimáticos/metabolismo , Engenharia de Proteínas , Estrutura Terciária de Proteína/genética , Especificidade por Substrato
11.
Chem Biol ; 3(10): 833-9, 1996 Oct.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-8939702

RESUMO

BACKGROUND: Modular polyketide synthases govern the synthesis of a number of medically important antibiotics, and there is therefore great interest in understanding how genetic manipulation may be used to produce hybrid synthases that might synthesize novel polyketides. In particular, we aimed to show whether an individual domain can be replaced by a comparable domain from a different polyketide synthase to form a functional hybrid enzyme. To simplify the analysis, we have used our previously-developed model system DEBS1-TE, consisting of the first two chain-extension modules of the erythromycin-producing polyketide synthase of Saccharopolyspora erythraea. RESULTS: We show here that replacing the entire acyltransferase (AT) domain from module 1 of DEBS1-TE by the AT domain from module 2 of the rapamycin-producing polyketide synthase leads, as predicted, to the synthesis of two novel triketide lactones in good yield, in place of the two lactones produced by DEBS1-TE. Both of the novel products specifically lack a methyl group at C-4 of the lactone ring. CONCLUSIONS: Although the AT domain is a core structural domain of a modular polyketide synthase, it has been swapped to generate a truly hybrid multienzyme with a rationally altered specificity of chain extension. Identical manipulations carried out on known polyketide antibiotics might therefore generate families of potentially useful analogues that are inaccessible by chemical synthesis. These results also encourage the belief that other domains may be similarly swapped.


Assuntos
Complexos Multienzimáticos/química , Sequência de Aminoácidos , Dados de Sequência Molecular , Homologia de Sequência de Aminoácidos
12.
Chem Biol ; 5(8): 407-12, 1998 Aug.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-9710562

RESUMO

BACKGROUND: Polyketides are a large and structurally diverse group of natural products that include antibiotics, antifungal agents and immunosuppressant compounds. Polyketides are biosynthesised in filamentous bacteria on modular polyketide synthases (PKSs) in which each cycle of chain extension requires a different 'module' of enzymatic activities. The recently proposed dimeric model for modular PKSs predicts that even a single-module PKS should be catalytically active in the absence of other PKS components. Researchers are also interested in manipulating the stereochemical outcome of polyketide chain extension using genetic engineering of domains within each module. RESULTS: We have constructed a minimal modular PKS from the erythromycin-producing PKS (DEBS) of Saccharopolyspora erythraea. The diketide synthase (DKS1-2) consists of a single chimaeric extension module, derived from the DEBS module 1 ketoacyl-ACP synthase (KS), sandwiched between a loading module and a chain-terminating thioesterase. When DKS1-2 was expressed in S. erythraea, the strain preferentially6 accumulated the diketide (2R, 3S)-2-methyl-3-hydroxy pentanoic acid. CONCLUSIONS: These results demonstrate that, as predicted, even a single-module PKS is catalytically active in the absence of other DEBS proteins. In its normal context, the ketosynthase domain KS1 is thought to generate a (2S)-2methyl-3-hydroxy intermediate by epimerising the initial product of carbon-carbon chain formation, the (2R)-2-methyl-3-ketoester. The observed formation of the alternative (2R)-methyl-3-hydroxy product catalysed by DKS1-2 provides strong support for this proposal, and indicates how targeted alteration of stereospecificity can be achieved on a modular PKS.


Assuntos
Complexos Multienzimáticos/síntese química , Engenharia de Proteínas , Dimerização , Cromatografia Gasosa-Espectrometria de Massas , Modelos Moleculares , Complexos Multienzimáticos/metabolismo , Saccharopolyspora/enzimologia , Estereoisomerismo
13.
Chem Biol ; 2(9): 583-9, 1995 Sep.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-9383462

RESUMO

BACKGROUND: The 6-deoxyerythronolide B synthase (DEBS) of Saccharopolyspora erythraea, which synthesizes the aglycone core of the antibiotic erythromycin A, contains some 30 active sites distributed between three multienzyme polypeptides (designated DEBS1-3). This complexity has hitherto frustrated mechanistic analysis of such enzymes. We previously produced a mutant strain of S. erythraea in which the chain-terminating cyclase domain (TE) is fused to the carboxyl-terminus of DEBS1, the multienzyme that catalyzes the first two rounds of polyketide chain extension in S. erythraea. This mutant strain produces triketide lactone in vivo. We set out to purify the chimaeric enzyme and to determine its activity in vitro. RESULTS: The purified DEBS1-TE multienzyme catalyzes synthesis of triketide lactones in vitro. The synthase specifically uses the (2S)-isomer of methylmalonyl-CoA, as previously proposed, but has a more relaxed specificity for the starter unit than in vivo. CONCLUSIONS: We have obtained a purified polyketide synthase system, derived from DEBS, which retains catalytic activity. This approach opens the way for mechanistic and structural analyses of active multienzymes derived from any modular polyketide synthase.


Assuntos
Complexos Multienzimáticos/metabolismo , Sistema Livre de Células , Complexos Multienzimáticos/química , Proteínas Recombinantes de Fusão/biossíntese , Saccharopolyspora/enzimologia , Estereoisomerismo
14.
Chem Biol ; 8(4): 329-40, 2001 Apr.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-11325589

RESUMO

BACKGROUND: Polyketides are structurally diverse natural products with a range of medically useful activities. Non-aromatic bacterial polyketides are synthesised on modular polyketide synthase multienzymes (PKSs) in which each cycle of chain extension requires a different 'module' of enzymatic activities. Attempts to design and construct modular PKSs that synthesise specified novel polyketides provide a particularly stringent test of our understanding of PKS structure and function. RESULTS: We show that the ketoreductase (KR) domains of modules 5 and 6 of the erythromycin PKS, housed in the multienzyme subunit DEBS3, exert an unexpectedly low level of stereochemical control in reducing the keto group of a synthetic analogue of the diketide intermediate. This led us to construct a hybrid triketide synthase based on DEBS3 with ketosynthase domain ketosynthase (KS)5 replaced by the loading module and KS1. The construct in vivo produced two major triketide stereoisomers, one expected and one surprising. The latter was of opposite configuration at three out of the four chiral centres: the branching alkyl centre was that produced by KS1 and, surprisingly, both hydroxyl centres produced by the reduction steps carried out by KR5 and KR6 respectively. CONCLUSIONS: These results demonstrate that the epimerising activity associated with module 1 of the erythromycin PKS can be conferred on module 5 merely by transfer of the KS1 domain. Moreover, the normally precise stereochemical control observed in modular PKSs is lost when KR5 and KR6 are challenged by an unfamiliar substrate, which is much smaller than their natural substrates. This observation demonstrates that the stereochemistry of ketoreduction is not necessarily invariant for a given KR domain and underlines the need for mechanistic understanding in designing genetically engineered PKSs to produce novel products.


Assuntos
Complexos Multienzimáticos/química , Complexos Multienzimáticos/metabolismo , Sequência de Aminoácidos , Cromatografia Líquida de Alta Pressão , Cromatografia Gasosa-Espectrometria de Massas , Lactonas/metabolismo , Espectroscopia de Ressonância Magnética , Dados de Sequência Molecular , Engenharia de Proteínas , Estrutura Terciária de Proteína , Subunidades Proteicas , Saccharopolyspora/enzimologia , Estereoisomerismo , Relação Estrutura-Atividade , Especificidade por Substrato
15.
Chem Biol ; 6(10): 731-41, 1999 Oct.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-10508677

RESUMO

BACKGROUND: Polyketides are structurally diverse natural products that have a range of medically useful activities. Nonaromatic bacterial polyketides are synthesised on modular polyketide synthase (PKS) multienzymes, in which each cycle of chain extension requires a different 'module' of enzymatic activities. Attempts to design and construct modular PKSs that synthesise specified novel polyketides provide a particularly stringent test of our understanding of PKS structure and function. RESULTS: We have constructed bimodular and trimodular PKSs based on DEBS1-TE, a derivative of the erythromycin PKS that contains only modules 1 and 2 and a thioesterase (TE), by substituting multiple domains with appropriate counterparts derived from the rapamycin PKS. Hybrid PKSs were obtained that synthesised the predicted target triketide lactones, which are simple analogues of cholesterol-lowering statins. In constructing intermodular fusions, whether between modules in the same or in different proteins, it was found advantageous to preserve intact the acyl carrier protein-ketosynthase (ACP-KS) didomain that spans the junction between successive modules. CONCLUSIONS: Relatively simple considerations govern the construction of functional hybrid PKSs. Fusion sites should be chosen either in the surface-accessible linker regions between enzymatic domains, as previously revealed, or just inside the conserved margins of domains. The interaction of an ACP domain with the adjacent KS domain, whether on the same polyketide or not, is of particular importance, both through conservation of appropriate protein-protein interactions, and through optimising molecular recognition of the altered polyketide chain in the key transfer of the acyl chain from the ACP of one module to the KS of the downstream module.


Assuntos
Desenho de Fármacos , Complexos Multienzimáticos/química , Engenharia de Proteínas , Sequência de Aminoácidos , Hipolipemiantes/química , Lactonas , Modelos Químicos , Modelos Moleculares , Dados de Sequência Molecular , Complexos Multienzimáticos/genética , Conformação Proteica , Saccharopolyspora
16.
Chem Biol ; 6(4): 189-95, 1999 Apr.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-10099131

RESUMO

BACKGROUND: Polyketides are compounds that possess medically significant activities. The modular nature of the polyketide synthase (PKS) multienzymes has generated interest in bioengineering new PKSs. Rational design of novel PKSs, however, requires a greater understanding of the stereocontrol mechanisms that operate in natural PKS modules. RESULTS: The N-acetyl cysteamine (NAC) thioester derivative of the natural beta-keto diketide intermediate was incubated with DEBS1-TE, a derivative of the erythromycin PKS that contains only modules 1 and 2. The reduction products of the two ketoreductase (KR) domains of DEBS1-TE were a mixture of the (2S, 3R) and (2R,3S) isomers of the corresponding beta-hydroxy diketide NAC thioesters. Repeating the incubation using a DEBS1-TE mutant that only contains KR1 produced only the (2S,3R) isomer. CONCLUSIONS: In contrast with earlier results, KR1 selects only the (2S) isomer and reduces it stereospecifically to the (2S, 3R)-3-hydroxy-2-methyl acyl product. The KR domain of module 1 controls the stereochemical outcome at both methyl-and hydroxyl-bearing chiral centres in the hydroxy diketide intermediate. Earlier work showed that the normal enzyme-bound ketoester generated in module 2 is not epimerised, however. The stereochemistry at C-2 is therefore established by a condensation reaction that exclusively gives the (2R)-ketoester, and the stereo-chemistry at C-3 by reduction of the keto group. Two different mechanisms of stereochemical control, therefore, operate in modules 1 and 2 of the erythromycin PKS. These results should provide a more rational basis for designing hybrid PKSs to generate altered stereochemistry in polyketide products.


Assuntos
Complexos Multienzimáticos/química , Complexos Multienzimáticos/metabolismo , Catálise , Cromatografia Líquida de Alta Pressão , Oxirredução , Conformação Proteica , Estereoisomerismo , Especificidade por Substrato
17.
Chem Biol ; 5(12): 743-54, 1998 Dec.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-9862800

RESUMO

BACKGROUND: Modular polyketide synthases (PKSs) catalyse the biosynthesis of complex polyketides using a different set of enzymes for each successive cycle of chain extension. Directed biosynthesis starting from synthetic diketides is a potentially valuable route to novel polyketides. We have used a purified bimodular derivative of the erythromycin-producing polyketide synthase (DEBS 1-TE) to study chain extension starting from a variety of diketide analogues and, in some cases, from the alternative acyl-CoA thioester substrates. RESULTS: Chain initiation in vitro by DEBS 1-TE module 2 using a synthetic diketide analogue as a substrate was tolerant of significant structural variation in the starter unit of the synthetic diketide, but other changes completely abolished activity. Interestingly, a racemic beta-keto diketide was found to be reduced in situ on the PKS and utilised in place of its more complex hydroxy analogue as a substrate for chain extension. The presence of a diketide analogue strongly inhibited chain initiation via the loading module. Significantly higher concentrations of diketide N-acetylcysteamine analogues than their corresponding acyl-CoA thioesters are required to achieve comparable yields of triketide lactones. CONCLUSIONS: Although a broad range of variation in the starter residue is acceptable, the substrate specificity of module 2 of a typical modular PKS in vitro is relatively intolerant of changes at C-2 and C-3. This will restrict the usefulness of approaches to synthesise novel erythromycins using synthetic diketides in vivo. The use of synthetic beta-keto diketides in vivo deserves to be explored.


Assuntos
Eritromicina/síntese química , Complexos Multienzimáticos/metabolismo , Catálise , Eritromicina/química , Lactonas/metabolismo , Modelos Químicos , Estereoisomerismo
18.
Chem Biol ; 8(5): 475-85, 2001 May.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-11358694

RESUMO

BACKGROUND: Modular polyketide synthases catalyse the biosynthesis of medically useful natural products by stepwise chain assembly, with each module of enzyme activities catalysing a separate cycle of polyketide chain extension. Domain swapping between polyketide synthases leads to hybrid multienzymes that yield novel polyketides in a more or less predictable way. No experiments have so far been reported which attempt to enlarge a polyketide synthase by interpolating additional modules. RESULTS: We describe here the construction of tetraketide synthases in which an entire extension module from the rapamycin-producing polyketide synthase is covalently spliced between the first two extension modules of the erythromycin-producing polyketide synthase (DEBS). The extended polyketide synthases thus formed are found to catalyse the synthesis of specific tetraketide products containing an appropriate extra ketide unit. Co-expression in Saccharopolyspora erythraea of the extended DEBS multienzyme with multienzymes DEBS 2 and DEBS 3 leads to the formation, as expected, of novel octaketide macrolactones. In each case the predicted products are accompanied by significant amounts of unextended products, corresponding to those of the unaltered DEBS PKS. We refer to this newly observed phenomenon as 'skipping'. CONCLUSIONS: The strategy exemplified here shows far-reaching possibilities for combinatorial engineering of polyketide natural products, as well as revealing the ability of modular polyketide synthases to 'skip' extension modules. The results also provide additional insight into the three-dimensional arrangement of modules within these giant synthases.


Assuntos
Cicloexanonas/isolamento & purificação , Dissacarídeos/isolamento & purificação , Eritromicina/biossíntese , Complexos Multienzimáticos/genética , Complexos Multienzimáticos/metabolismo , Mutagênese Insercional/genética , Dissacarídeos/biossíntese , Engenharia de Proteínas , Saccharopolyspora/genética , Saccharopolyspora/metabolismo
19.
Chem Biol ; 7(2): 111-7, 2000 Feb.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-10662692

RESUMO

BACKGROUND: The macrolide antibiotic erythromycin A, like other complex aliphatic polyketides, is synthesised by a bacterial modular polyketide synthase (PKS). Such PKSs, in contrast to other fatty acid and polyketide synthases which work iteratively, contain a separate set or module of enzyme activities for each successive cycle of polyketide chain extension, and the number and type of modules together determine the structure of the polyketide product. Thus, the six extension modules of the erythromycin PKS (DEBS) together catalyse the production of the specific heptaketide 6-deoxyerythronolide B. RESULTS: A mutant strain of the erythromycin producer Saccharopolyspora erythraea, which accumulates the aglycone intermediate erythronolide B, was found unexpectedly to produce two novel octaketides, both 16-membered macrolides. These compounds were detectable in fermentation broths of wild-type S. erythraea, but not in a strain from which the DEBS genes had been specifically deleted. From their structures, both of these octaketides appear to be aberrant products of DEBS in which module 4 has 'stuttered', that is, has catalysed two successive cycles of chain extension. CONCLUSIONS: The isolation of novel DEBS-derived octaketides provides the first evidence that an extension module in a modular PKS has the potential to catalyse iterative rounds of chain elongation like other type I FAS and PKS systems. The factors governing the extent of such 'stuttering' remain to be determined.


Assuntos
Antibacterianos/biossíntese , Antibacterianos/química , Complexos Multienzimáticos/genética , Eritromicina/análogos & derivados , Eritromicina/química , Família Multigênica/genética , Mutação , Elongação Traducional da Cadeia Peptídica/genética , Biossíntese de Proteínas , Saccharopolyspora/genética
20.
Protein Sci ; 5(9): 1922-7, 1996 Sep.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-8880917

RESUMO

Point mutations in the human gene encoding coenzyme B12 (adenosylcobalamin)-dependent methylmalonyl-CoA mutase give rise to an inherited disorder of propionic acid metabolism termed mut methylmalonic aciduria. Almost all such mutations alter amino acids in the homodimeric human enzyme that are identical to residues in the catalytic alpha-subunit of the heterodimeric methylmalonyl-CoA mutase from the bacterium Propionibacterium shermanii, to which the mature human enzyme shows an overall 65% sequence identity. To explore how specific mutations might cause the observed clinical phenotype, 12 known mutations were mapped onto a three-dimensional homology model of the subunit of the human enzyme, generated using the program MODELLER on the basis of the recently published 2.0 A X-ray crystal structure of the P. shermanii methylmalonyl-CoA mutase. Eight mutations are found in the C-terminal B12-binding domain, of which 4 (G623R, G626C, G630E, G703R) are in direct contact with the corrin and are clustered around the histidine ligand (H627) provided by the protein to coordinate the cobalt atom of the B12 cofactor. Introduction of a side chain, particularly one that is charged, at any of these positions is expected to disrupt the flavodoxin-like fold and severely impair its binding of B12. Mutation at either of two other highly conserved glycine residues in this domain (G648D, G717V) also disrupts critical elements in the fold as would the introduction of an additional positive charge in the mutation H678R. Mutation of an arginine in a solvent-exposed loop to a hydrophobic residue (R694W) is also pathogenic. The remaining mutations have been mapped to the N-terminal region of the mutase, two of which introduce a buried, uncompensated charge, either near the subunit interface (A377E), or near the narrow channel through which acyl-CoA esters gain access to the active site (W105R). The extreme N-terminus of methylmalonyl-CoA mutase is predicted to make extensive contacts with the other subunit, and a mutant in this region (R93H) may prevent the correct assembly of the dimer.


Assuntos
Erros Inatos do Metabolismo dos Aminoácidos/genética , Ácido Metilmalônico/urina , Metilmalonil-CoA Mutase/química , Modelos Moleculares , Mutação Puntual , Homologia de Sequência , Sequência de Aminoácidos , Sítios de Ligação , Cobamidas/metabolismo , Simulação por Computador , Cristalização , Humanos , Metilmalonil-CoA Mutase/genética , Metilmalonil-CoA Mutase/metabolismo , Dados de Sequência Molecular , Propionibacterium/enzimologia , Dobramento de Proteína , Difração de Raios X
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