19 research outputs found
Structural characterization of the mitomycin 7â O âmethyltransferase
Mitomycins are quinoneâcontaining antibiotics, widely used as antitumor drugs in chemotherapy. Mitomycinâ7â O âmethyltransferase (MmcR), a key tailoring enzyme involved in the biosynthesis of mitomycin in Streptomyces lavendulae , catalyzes the 7â O âmethylation of both C9ÎČâ and C9αâconfigured 7âhydroxymitomycins. We have determined the crystal structures of the MmcRâ S âadenosylhomocysteine (SAH) binary complex and MmcRâSAHâmitomycin A (MMA) ternary complex at resolutions of 1.9and 2.3 Ă
, respectively. The study revealed MmcR to adopt a common S âadenosylâ L âmethionineâdependent O âmethyltransferase fold and the presence of a structurally conserved active site general acidâbase pair is consistent with a protonâassisted methyltransfer common to most methyltransferases. Given the importance of C7 alkylation to modulate mitomycin redox potential, this study may also present a template toward the future engineering of catalysts to generate uniquely bioactive mitomycins. Proteins 2011. © 2011 WileyâLiss, Inc.Peer Reviewedhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/87038/1/PROT_23040_sm_suppinfo.pdfhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/87038/2/23040_ftp.pd
Enhancement of Cyclopamine via Conjugation with Nonmetabolic Sugars
The <i>Veratrum</i> alkaloid cyclopamine, an inhibitor of cancer stem cell growth, was used as a representative scaffold to evaluate the inhibitory impact of glycosylation with a group of nonmetabolic saccharides, such as d-threose. In a five-step divergent process, a 32-member glycoside library was created and assayed to determine that glycosides of such sugars notably improved the GI<sub>50</sub> value of cyclopamine while metabolic sugars, such as d-glucose, did not
Understanding molecular recognition of promiscuity of thermophilic methionine adenosyltransferase sMAT from Sulfolobus solfataricus
Methionine adenosyltransferase (MAT) is a family of enzymes that utilizes ATP and methionine to produce S-adenosylmethionine (AdoMet), the most crucial methyl donor in the biological methylation of biomolecules and bioactive natural products. Here, we report that the MAT from Sulfolobus solfataricus (sMAT), an enzyme from a poorly explored class of the MAT family, has the ability to produce a range of differentially alkylated AdoMet analogs in the presence of non-native methionine analogs and ATP. To investigate the molecular basis for AdoMet analog production, we have crystallized the sMAT in the AdoMet bound, S-adenosylethionine (AdoMet) bound, and unbound forms. Notably, among these structures, the AdoEth-bound form offers the first MAT structure containing a non-native product and cumulatively, these structures add new structural insight into the MAT family and allow for detailed active site comparison with its homologs in E. coli and human. As a thermostable MAT structure from archaea, the structures herein also provide as a basis for future engineering to potentially broaden AdoMet analog production as reagents for methyltransferase-catalyzed âalkylrandomizationâ and/or the study of methylation in the context of biological processes
Biochemical and Structural Insights of the Early Glycosylation Steps in Calicheamicin Biosynthesis
SummaryThe enediyne antibiotic calicheamicin (CLM) Îł1I is a prominent antitumor agent that is targeted to DNA by a novel aryltetrasaccharide comprised of an aromatic unit and four unusual carbohydrates. Herein we report the heterologous expression and the biochemical characterization of the two âinternalâ glycosyltransferases CalG3 and CalG2 and the structural elucidation of an enediyne glycosyltransferase (CalG3). In conjunction with the previous characterization of the âexternalâ CLM GTs CalG1 and CalG4, this study completes the functional assignment of all four CLM GTs, extends the utility of enediyne GT-catalyzed reaction reversibility, and presents conclusive evidence of a sequential glycosylation pathway in CLM biosynthesis. This work also reveals the common GT-B structural fold can now be extended to include enediyne GTs
Virus-encoded miRNAs in Ebola virus disease
Abstract Ebola virus (EBOV) is a negative-strand RNA virus that replicates in the cytoplasm and causes an often-fatal hemorrhagic fever. EBOV, like other viruses, can reportedly encode its own microRNAs (miRNAs) to subvert host immune defenses. miRNAs are short noncoding RNAs that can regulate gene expression by hybridizing to multiple mRNAs, and viral miRNAs can enhance viral replication and infectivity by regulating host or viral genes. To date, only one EBOV miRNA has been examined in human infection. Here, we assayed mouse, rhesus macaque, cynomolgus macaque, and human samples infected with three EBOV variants for twelve computationally predicted viral miRNAs using RT-qPCR. Ten miRNAs aligned to EBOV variants and were detectable in the four species during disease with several viral miRNAs showing presymptomatic amplification in animal models. miRNA abundances in both the mouse and nonhuman primate models mirrored the human cohort, with miR-1-5p, miR-1-3p, and miR-T3-3p consistently at the highest levels. These striking similarities in the most abundant miRNAs during infection with different EBOV variants and hosts indicate that these miRNAs are potential valuable diagnostic markers and key effectors of EBOV pathogenesis