2 research outputs found
Understanding Programming of Fungal Iterative Polyketide Synthases: The Biochemical Basis for Regioselectivity by the Methyltransferase Domain in the Lovastatin Megasynthase
Highly
reducing polyketide synthases (HR-PKSs) from fungi synthesize complex
natural products using a single set of domains in a highly programmed,
iterative fashion. The most enigmatic feature of HR-PKSs is how tailoring
domains function selectively during different iterations of chain
elongation to afford structural diversity. Using the lovastatin nonaketide
synthase LovB as a model system and a variety of acyl substrates,
we characterized the substrate specificity of the LovB methyltransferase
(MT) domain. We showed that, while the MT domain displays methylation
activity toward different β-ketoacyl groups, it is exceptionally
selective toward its naturally programmed β-keto-dienyltetraketide
substrate with respect to both chain length and functionalization.
Accompanying characterization of the ketoreductase (KR) domain displays
broader substrate specificity toward different β-ketoacyl groups.
Our studies indicate that selective modifications by tailoring domains,
such as the MTs, are achieved by higher kinetic efficiency on a particular
substrate relative to the rate of transformation by other competing
domains