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1.
Nucleic Acids Res ; 49(10): 5832-5844, 2021 06 04.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34037793

ABSTRACT

By virtue of its chaperone activity, the capsid protein of dengue virus strain 2 (DENV2C) promotes nucleic acid structural rearrangements. However, the role of DENV2C during the interaction of RNA elements involved in stabilizing the 5'-3' panhandle structure of DENV RNA is still unclear. Therefore, we determined how DENV2C affects structural functionality of the capsid-coding region hairpin element (cHP) during annealing and strand displacement of the 9-nt cyclization sequence (5CS) and its complementary 3CS. cHP has two distinct functions: a role in translation start codon selection and a role in RNA synthesis. Our results showed that cHP impedes annealing between 5CS and 3CS. Although DENV2C does not modulate structural functionality of cHP, it accelerates annealing and specifically promotes strand displacement of 3CS during 5'-3' panhandle formation. Furthermore, DENV2C exerts its chaperone activity by favouring one of the active conformations of cHP. Based on our results, we propose mechanisms for annealing and strand displacement involving cHP. Thus, our results provide mechanistic insights into how DENV2C regulates RNA synthesis by modulating essential RNA elements in the capsid-coding region, that in turn allow for DENV replication.


Subject(s)
Capsid Proteins/metabolism , Dengue Virus/metabolism , Molecular Chaperones/metabolism , RNA, Viral/genetics , RNA, Viral/metabolism , Recombination, Genetic/genetics , Virus Replication/genetics , Capsid/metabolism , Capsid Proteins/genetics , Codon, Initiator , Cyclization/genetics , Dengue Virus/genetics , Kinetics , Molecular Chaperones/genetics , Nucleic Acid Conformation , Spectrometry, Fluorescence , Spectroscopy, Fourier Transform Infrared
2.
Molecules ; 26(5)2021 Mar 09.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33803234

ABSTRACT

Conditionally activated ("caged") oligonucleotides provide useful spatiotemporal control for studying dynamic biological processes, e.g., regulating in vivo gene expression or probing specific oligonucleotide targets. This review summarizes recent advances in caging strategies, which involve different stimuli in the activation step. Oligo cyclization is a particularly attractive caging strategy, which simplifies the probe design and affords oligo stabilization. Our laboratory developed an efficient synthesis for circular caged oligos, and a circular caged antisense DNA oligo was successfully applied in gene regulation. A second technology is Transcriptome In Vivo Analysis (TIVA), where caged oligos enable mRNA isolation from single cells in living tissue. We highlight our development of TIVA probes with improved caging stability. Finally, we illustrate the first protease-activated oligo probe, which was designed for caspase-3. This expands the toolkit for investigating the transcriptome under a specific physiologic condition (e.g., apoptosis), particularly in specimens where light activation is impractical.


Subject(s)
Gene Expression Regulation/genetics , Oligonucleotides, Antisense/chemistry , Oligonucleotides/chemistry , Animals , Cyclization/genetics , Enzyme Activation/genetics , Gene Expression/genetics , Gene Expression Profiling/methods , Humans , Light , Oligonucleotides/genetics , Oligonucleotides, Antisense/genetics , RNA, Messenger/genetics , Synthetic Biology/methods
3.
Int J Biol Macromol ; 175: 254-261, 2021 Apr 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33561459

ABSTRACT

The efficiency of enzymatic cyclodextrin production using cyclodextrin glycosyltransferases (CGTases) is limited by product inhibition. In this study, maltose binding site 2 (MBS2) of the ß-CGTase from Bacillus circulans STB01 was modified to decrease product inhibition. First, two point mutants were prepared at position 599 (A599V and A599N). Then, two double mutants incorporating alanine at position 633 (A599N/Y633A and A599V/Y633A) were prepared. Finally, the entire MBS2 region was replaced by that of the α-CGTase from Paenibacillus macerans JFB05-01 to form multipoint mutant MBS2 ߠ→ α. All five mutants exhibited mixed-type product inhibition, although both the competitive and uncompetitive components of this inhibition were decreased. The total cyclization activities of A599N, A599V and A599V/Y633A were 15.6%, 76.8% and 70.9% lower than that of the wild-type, respectively, while that of A599N/Y633A was 22.4% higher. Among the mutants, only MBS2 ߠ→ α showed catalytic efficiency (kcat/Km) comparable with that of the wild-type. Moreover, A599N, A599N/Y633A and MBS2 ߠ→ α produced cyclodextrin yields 13.1%, 15.8% and 19.7% greater than that of the wild-type, respectively. These results suggest that A599N, A599N/Y633A and MBS2 ߠ→ α may be more suitable than the wild-type for cyclodextrin production.


Subject(s)
Bacillus/metabolism , Glucosyltransferases/genetics , Glucosyltransferases/metabolism , Maltose/metabolism , Bacillus/genetics , Bacterial Proteins/chemistry , Binding Sites/genetics , Cyclization/genetics , Cyclodextrins/metabolism , Kinetics , Maltose-Binding Proteins/genetics , Maltose-Binding Proteins/metabolism , Models, Molecular , Mutagenesis, Site-Directed/methods , Mutation/genetics , Paenibacillus/genetics , Substrate Specificity/genetics , beta-Cyclodextrins/chemistry
4.
Chemistry ; 27(9): 3106-3113, 2021 Feb 10.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33146923

ABSTRACT

A key step during the biosynthesis of cytochalasans is a proposed Knoevenagel condensation to form the pyrrolone core, enabling the subsequent 4+2 cycloaddition reaction that results in the characteristic octahydroisoindolone motif of all cytochalasans. In this work, we investigate the role of the highly conserved α,ß-hydrolase enzymes PyiE and ORFZ during the biosynthesis of pyrichalasin H and the ACE1 metabolite, respectively, using gene knockout and complementation techniques. Using synthetic aldehyde models we demonstrate that the Knoevenagel condensation proceeds spontaneously but results in the 1,3-dihydro-2H-pyrrol-2-one tautomer, rather than the required 1,5-dihydro-2H-pyrrol-2-one tautomer. Taken together our results suggest that the α,ß-hydrolase enzymes are essential for first ring cyclisation, but the precise nature of the intermediates remains to be determined.


Subject(s)
Cyclization/genetics , Cytochalasins/biosynthesis , Pyrroles/chemistry , Pyrroles/metabolism , Aldehydes/chemistry , Cycloaddition Reaction
5.
Biochemistry ; 59(47): 4507-4515, 2020 12 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33182997

ABSTRACT

Terpenes make up the largest class of natural products, with extensive chemical and structural diversity. Diterpenes, mostly isolated from plants and rarely prokaryotes, exhibit a variety of important biological activities and valuable applications, including providing antitumor and antibiotic pharmaceuticals. These natural products are constructed by terpene synthases, a class of enzymes that catalyze one of the most complex chemical reactions in biology: converting simple acyclic oligo-isoprenyl diphosphate substrates to complex polycyclic products via carbocation intermediates. Here we obtained the second ever crystal structure of a class II diterpene synthase from bacteria, tuberculosinol pyrophosphate synthase (i.e., Halimadienyl diphosphate synthase, MtHPS, or Rv3377c) from Mycobacterium tuberculosis (Mtb). This enzyme transforms (E,E,E)-geranylgeranyl diphosphate into tuberculosinol pyrophosphate (Halimadienyl diphosphate). Rv3377c is part of the Mtb diterpene pathway along with Rv3378c, which converts tuberculosinol pyrophosphate to 1-tuberculosinyl adenosine (1-TbAd). This pathway was shown to exist only in virulent Mycobacterium species, but not in closely related avirulent species, and was proposed to be involved in phagolysosome maturation arrest. To gain further insight into the reaction pathway and the mechanistically relevant enzyme substrate binding orientation, electronic structure calculation and docking studies of reaction intermediates were carried out. Results reveal a plausible binding mode of the substrate that can provide the information to guide future drug design and anti-infective therapies of this biosynthetic pathway.


Subject(s)
Alkyl and Aryl Transferases/chemistry , Diterpenes/metabolism , Models, Molecular , Mycobacterium tuberculosis/enzymology , Alkyl and Aryl Transferases/genetics , Alkyl and Aryl Transferases/metabolism , Bacterial Proteins/chemistry , Bacterial Proteins/genetics , Bacterial Proteins/metabolism , Cloning, Molecular , Crystallography, X-Ray , Cyclization/genetics , Diterpenes/chemistry , Molecular Docking Simulation , Mycobacterium tuberculosis/genetics
6.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A ; 116(51): 25614-25623, 2019 12 17.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31801877

ABSTRACT

Nonribosomal peptide synthetases (NRPSs) generate the core peptide scaffolds of many natural products. These include small cyclic dipeptides such as the insect feeding deterrent peramine, which is a pyrrolopyrazine (PPZ) produced by grass-endophytic Epichloë fungi. Biosynthesis of peramine is catalyzed by the 2-module NRPS, PpzA-1, which has a C-terminal reductase (R) domain that is required for reductive release and cyclization of the NRPS-tethered dipeptidyl-thioester intermediate. However, some PpzA variants lack this R domain due to insertion of a transposable element into the 3' end of ppzA We demonstrate here that these truncated PpzA variants utilize nonenzymatic cyclization of the dipeptidyl thioester to a 2,5-diketopiperazine (DKP) to synthesize a range of novel PPZ products. Truncation of the R domain is sufficient to subfunctionalize PpzA-1 into a dedicated DKP synthetase, exemplified by the truncated variant, PpzA-2, which has also evolved altered substrate specificity and reduced N-methyltransferase activity relative to PpzA-1. Further allelic diversity has been generated by recombination-mediated domain shuffling between ppzA-1 and ppzA-2, resulting in the ppzA-3 and ppzA-4 alleles, each of which encodes synthesis of a unique PPZ metabolite. This research establishes that efficient NRPS-catalyzed DKP biosynthesis can occur in vivo through nonenzymatic dipeptidyl cyclization and presents a remarkably clean example of NRPS evolution through recombinant exchange of functionally divergent domains. This work highlights that allelic variants of a single NRPS can result in a surprising level of secondary metabolite diversity comparable to that observed for some gene clusters.


Subject(s)
Peptide Synthases , Pyrazines , Cyclization/genetics , DNA Shuffling , Diketopiperazines/chemistry , Epichloe/enzymology , Epichloe/genetics , Fungal Proteins/chemistry , Fungal Proteins/genetics , Fungal Proteins/metabolism , Peptide Synthases/chemistry , Peptide Synthases/genetics , Peptide Synthases/metabolism , Pyrazines/chemistry , Pyrazines/metabolism , Recombinant Proteins/chemistry , Recombinant Proteins/genetics , Recombinant Proteins/metabolism
7.
Nat Commun ; 10(1): 2613, 2019 06 13.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31197182

ABSTRACT

Kistamicin is a divergent member of the glycopeptide antibiotics, a structurally complex class of important, clinically relevant antibiotics often used as the last resort against resistant bacteria. The extensively crosslinked structure of these antibiotics that is essential for their activity makes their chemical synthesis highly challenging and limits their production to bacterial fermentation. Kistamicin contains three crosslinks, including an unusual 15-membered A-O-B ring, despite the presence of only two Cytochrome P450 Oxy enzymes thought to catalyse formation of such crosslinks within the biosynthetic gene cluster. In this study, we characterise the kistamicin cyclisation pathway, showing that the two Oxy enzymes are responsible for these crosslinks within kistamicin and that they function through interactions with the X-domain, unique to glycopeptide antibiotic biosynthesis. We also show that the kistamicin OxyC enzyme is a promiscuous biocatalyst, able to install multiple crosslinks into peptides containing phenolic amino acids.


Subject(s)
Actinobacteria/metabolism , Anti-Bacterial Agents/metabolism , Biosynthetic Pathways/genetics , Glycopeptides/biosynthesis , Peptides/metabolism , Actinobacteria/genetics , Anti-Bacterial Agents/chemistry , Bacterial Proteins/genetics , Bacterial Proteins/metabolism , Biocatalysis , Cyclization/genetics , Cytochrome P-450 Enzyme System/genetics , Cytochrome P-450 Enzyme System/metabolism , Glycopeptides/chemistry , Multigene Family , Peptides/chemistry
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