14 research outputs found

    Tundrenone: An Atypical Secondary Metabolite from Bacteria with Highly Restricted Primary Metabolism

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    Methane-oxidizing bacteria, aerobes that utilize methane as their sole carbon and energy source, are being increasingly studied for their environmentally significant ability to remove methane from the atmosphere. Their genomes indicate that they also have a robust and unusual secondary metabolism. Bioinformatic analysis of the Methylobacter tundripaludum genome identified biosynthetic gene clusters for several intriguing metabolites, and this report discloses the structural and genetic characterization of tundrenone, one of these metabolites. Tundrenone is a highly oxidized metabolite that incorporates both a modified bicyclic chorismate-derived fragment and a modified lipid tail bearing a β,γ-unsaturated α-hydroxy ketone. Tundrenone has been genetically linked to its biosynthetic gene cluster, and quorum sensing activates its production. M. tundripaludum’s genome and tundrenone’s discovery support the idea that additional studies of methane-oxidizing bacteria will reveal new naturally occurring molecular scaffolds and the biosynthetic pathways that produce them

    Mild Double Allylboration Reactions of Nitriles and Acid Anhydrides Using Potassium Allyltrifluoroborate

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    The double allylboration of nitriles and acid anhydrides to form bis-allyl amines and esters, respectively, can be achieved through the use of potassium allyltrifluoroborate in the presence of boron trifluoride etherate at room temperature. The method described is relatively mild, exhibits chemoselectivity to other electrophiles present, avoids the use of metals, and features the use of an operationally stable and robust potassium organotrifluoroborate reagent

    Natalamycin A, an ansamycin from a termite-associated <i>Streptomyces</i> sp.

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    We report a preliminary functional and complete structural characterization of a highly unusual geldanamycin analog, natalamycin A, that was isolated from Streptomyces strain M56 recovered from a South African nest of Macrotermes natalensis termites. Bioassay-guided fractionation based on antifungal activity led to the isolation of natalamycin A, and a combination of NMR spectroscopy and X-ray crystallographic analysis, including highly-accurate quantum-chemical NMR calculations on the largest and most conformationally-flexible system to date, revealed natalamycin A’s three-dimensional solid- and solution-state structure. This structure along with the structures of related compounds isolated from the same source suggest a geldanamycin-like biosynthetic pathway with unusual post-PKS modifications

    Macrotermycins A–D, Glycosylated Macrolactams from a Termite-Associated <i>Amycolatopsis</i> sp. M39

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    Bioassay-guided metabolomic analyses led to the characterization of four new 20-membered glycosylated polyketide macrolactams, macrotermycins A–D, from a termite-associated actinomycete, <i>Amycolatopsis</i> sp. M39. M39’s sequenced genome revealed the macrotermycin’s putative biosynthetic gene cluster. Macrotermycins A and C had antibacterial activity against human-pathogenic <i>Staphylococcus aureus</i> and, of greater ecological relevance, they also had selective antifungal activity against a fungal parasite of the termite fungal garden
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