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1.
ACS Chem Biol ; 18(10): 2267-2280, 2023 10 20.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37788216

ABSTRACT

Tunicamycins (TUNs) are Streptomyces-derived natural products, widely used to block protein N-glycosylation in eukaryotes or cell wall biosynthesis in bacteria. Modified or synthetic TUN analogues that uncouple these activities have considerable potential as novel mode-of-action antibacterial agents. Chemically modified TUNs reported previously with attenuated activity on yeast have pinpointed eukaryotic-specific chemophores in the uridyl group and the N-acyl chain length and terminal branching pattern. A small molecule screen of fatty acid biosynthetic primers identified several novel alicyclic- and neo-branched TUN N-acyl variants, with primer incorporation at the terminal omega-acyl position. TUNs with unique 5- and 6-carbon ω-cycloalkane and ω-cycloalkene acyl chains are produced under fermentation and in yields comparable with the native TUN. The purification, structural assignments, and the comparable antimicrobial properties of 15 of these compounds are reported, greatly extending the structural diversity of this class of compounds for potential medicinal and agricultural applications.


Subject(s)
Anti-Bacterial Agents , Fatty Acids , Tunicamycin/pharmacology , Anti-Bacterial Agents/pharmacology , Anti-Bacterial Agents/chemistry , Glycosylation
2.
ACS Chem Biol ; 16(1): 116-124, 2021 01 15.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33411499

ABSTRACT

Branched-chain fatty acids (BCFA) are encountered in Gram-positive bacteria, but less so in other organisms. The bacterial BCFA in membranes are typically saturated, with both odd- and even-numbered carbon chain lengths, and with methyl branches at either the ω-1 (iso) or ω-2 (anteiso) positions. The acylation with BCFA also contributes to the structural diversity of microbial natural products and potentially modulates biological activity. For the tunicamycin (TUN) family of natural products, the toxicity toward eukaryotes is highly dependent upon N-acylation with trans-2,3-unsaturated BCFA. The loss of the 2,3-unsaturation gives modified TUN with reduced eukaryotic toxicity but crucially with retention of the synergistic enhancement of the ß-lactam group of antibiotics. Here, we infer from genomics, mass spectrometry, and deuterium labeling that the trans-2,3-unsaturated TUN variants and the saturated cellular lipids found in TUN-producing Streptomyces are derived from the same pool of BCFA metabolites. Moreover, non-natural primers of BCFA metabolism are selectively incorporated into the cellular lipids of TUN-producing Streptomyces and concomitantly produce structurally novel neo-branched TUN N-acyl variants.


Subject(s)
Biological Products/metabolism , Lipid Metabolism , Streptomyces/metabolism , Biological Products/chemistry , Chromatography, High Pressure Liquid/methods , Spectrometry, Mass, Matrix-Assisted Laser Desorption-Ionization/methods , Structure-Activity Relationship
3.
Angew Chem Int Ed Engl ; 59(32): 13575-13580, 2020 08 03.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32357274

ABSTRACT

Engineering polyketide synthases (PKS) to produce new metabolites requires an understanding of catalytic points of failure during substrate processing. Growing evidence indicates the thioesterase (TE) domain as a significant bottleneck within engineered PKS systems. We created a series of hybrid PKS modules bearing exchanged TE domains from heterologous pathways and challenged them with both native and non-native polyketide substrates. Reactions pairing wildtype PKS modules with non-native substrates primarily resulted in poor conversions to anticipated macrolactones. Likewise, product formation with native substrates and hybrid PKS modules bearing non-cognate TE domains was severely reduced. In contrast, non-native substrates were converted by most hybrid modules containing a substrate compatible TE, directly implicating this domain as the major catalytic gatekeeper and highlighting its value as a target for protein engineering to improve analog production in PKS pathways.


Subject(s)
Polyketide Synthases/chemistry , Biocatalysis , Macrolides/chemical synthesis , Polyketide Synthases/genetics , Protein Domains , Protein Engineering , Substrate Specificity
4.
J Am Chem Soc ; 139(38): 13456-13465, 2017 09 27.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28836768

ABSTRACT

Macrolactonization of natural product analogs presents a significant challenge to both biosynthetic assembly and synthetic chemistry. In the preceding paper , we identified a thioesterase (TE) domain catalytic bottleneck processing unnatural substrates in the pikromycin (Pik) system, preventing the formation of epimerized macrolactones. Here, we perform molecular dynamics simulations showing the epimerized hexaketide was accommodated within the Pik TE active site; however, intrinsic conformational preferences of the substrate resulted in predominately unproductive conformations, in agreement with the observed hydrolysis. Accordingly, we engineered the stereoselective Pik TE to yield a variant (TES148C) with improved reaction kinetics and gain-of-function processing of an unnatural, epimerized hexaketide. Quantum mechanical comparison of model TES148C and TEWT reaction coordinate diagrams revealed a change in mechanism from a stepwise addition-elimination (TEWT) to a lower energy concerted acyl substitution (TES148C), accounting for the gain-of-function and improved reaction kinetics. Finally, we introduced the S148C mutation into a polyketide synthase module (PikAIII-TE) to impart increased substrate flexibility, enabling the production of diastereomeric macrolactones.


Subject(s)
Catalytic Domain/genetics , Macrolides/metabolism , Mutation , Thiolester Hydrolases/genetics , Thiolester Hydrolases/metabolism , Biocatalysis , Cyclization , Gain of Function Mutation , Kinetics , Molecular Dynamics Simulation , Polyketide Synthases/chemistry , Polyketide Synthases/genetics , Polyketide Synthases/metabolism , Substrate Specificity , Thiolester Hydrolases/chemistry
5.
J Am Chem Soc ; 139(38): 13450-13455, 2017 09 27.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28836772

ABSTRACT

Polyketide biosynthetic pathways have been engineered to generate natural product analogs for over two decades. However, manipulation of modular type I polyketide synthases (PKSs) to make unnatural metabolites commonly results in attenuated yields or entirely inactive pathways, and the mechanistic basis for compromised production is rarely elucidated since rate-limiting or inactive domain(s) remain unidentified. Accordingly, we synthesized and assayed a series of modified pikromycin (Pik) pentaketides that mimic early pathway engineering to probe the substrate tolerance of the PikAIII-TE module in vitro. Truncated pentaketides were processed with varying efficiencies to corresponding macrolactones, while pentaketides with epimerized chiral centers were poorly processed by PikAIII-TE and failed to generate 12-membered ring products. Isolation and identification of extended but prematurely offloaded shunt products suggested that the Pik thioesterase (TE) domain has limited substrate flexibility and functions as a gatekeeper in the processing of unnatural substrates. Synthesis of an analogous hexaketide with an epimerized nucleophilic hydroxyl group allowed for direct evaluation of the substrate stereoselectivity of the excised TE domain. The epimerized hexaketide failed to undergo cyclization and was exclusively hydrolyzed, confirming the TE domain as a key catalytic bottleneck. In an accompanying paper , we engineer the standalone Pik thioesterase to yield a thioesterase (TES148C) and module (PikAIII-TES148C) that display gain-of-function processing of substrates with inverted hydroxyl groups.


Subject(s)
Biosynthetic Pathways , Esterases/metabolism , Macrolides/chemistry , Macrolides/metabolism , Cyclization
6.
J Am Chem Soc ; 139(23): 7913-7920, 2017 06 14.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28525276

ABSTRACT

Polyketide synthases (PKSs) represent a powerful catalytic platform capable of effecting multiple carbon-carbon bond forming reactions and oxidation state adjustments. We explored the functionality of two terminal PKS modules that produce the 16-membered tylosin macrocycle, using them as biocatalysts in the chemoenzymatic synthesis of tylactone and its subsequent elaboration to complete the first total synthesis of the juvenimicin, M-4365, and rosamicin classes of macrolide antibiotics via late-stage diversification. Synthetic chemistry was employed to generate the tylactone hexaketide chain elongation intermediate that was accepted by the juvenimicin (Juv) ketosynthase of the penultimate JuvEIV PKS module. The hexaketide is processed through two complete modules (JuvEIV and JuvEV) in vitro, which catalyze elongation and functionalization of two ketide units followed by cyclization of the resulting octaketide into tylactone. After macrolactonization, a combination of in vivo glycosylation, selective in vitro cytochrome P450-mediated oxidation, and chemical oxidation was used to complete the scalable construction of a series of macrolide natural products in as few as 15 linear steps (21 total) with an overall yield of 4.6%.


Subject(s)
Anti-Bacterial Agents/biosynthesis , Macrolides/metabolism , Polyketide Synthases/metabolism , Polyketides/metabolism , Tylosin/analogs & derivatives , Anti-Bacterial Agents/chemistry , Anti-Bacterial Agents/pharmacology , Biocatalysis , Dose-Response Relationship, Drug , Gram-Negative Bacteria/drug effects , Gram-Positive Bacteria/drug effects , Macrolides/chemistry , Macrolides/pharmacology , Microbial Sensitivity Tests , Molecular Conformation , Polyketide Synthases/chemistry , Polyketides/chemistry , Polyketides/pharmacology , Structure-Activity Relationship , Tylosin/biosynthesis , Tylosin/chemistry , Tylosin/pharmacology
7.
J Am Chem Soc ; 137(11): 3735-8, 2015 Mar 25.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25730816

ABSTRACT

Biochemical characterization of polyketide synthases (PKSs) has relied on synthetic substrates functionalized as electrophilic esters to acylate the enzyme and initiate the catalytic cycle. In these efforts, N-acetylcysteamine thioesters have typically been employed for in vitro studies of full PKS modules as well as excised domains. However, substrate engineering approaches to control the catalytic cycle of a full PKS module harboring multiple domains remain underexplored. This study examines a series of alternatively activated native hexaketide substrates on the catalytic outcome of PikAIV, the sixth and final module of the pikromycin (Pik) pathway. We demonstrate the ability to control product formation with greater than 10:1 selectivity for either full module catalysis, leading to a 14-membered macrolactone, or direct cyclization to a 12-membered ring. This outcome was achieved through modifying the type of hexaketide ester employed, demonstrating the utility of substrate engineering in PKS functional studies and biocatalysis.


Subject(s)
Polyketide Synthases/metabolism , Polyketides/metabolism , Macrolides/chemistry , Macrolides/metabolism , Molecular Structure , Polyketide Synthases/genetics , Polyketides/chemistry , Substrate Specificity
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