5 research outputs found
Biochemical and Structural Characterization of MycCI, a Versatile P450 Biocatalyst from the Mycinamicin Biosynthetic Pathway
Cytochrome P450 monooxygenases
(P450s) are some of nature’s
most ubiquitous and versatile enzymes for performing oxidative metabolic
transformations. Their unmatched ability to selectively functionalize
inert C–H bonds has led to their increasing employment in academic
and industrial settings for the production of fine and commodity chemicals.
Many of the most interesting and potentially biocatalytically useful
P450s come from microorganisms, where they catalyze key tailoring
reactions in natural product biosynthetic pathways. While most of
these enzymes act on structurally complex pathway intermediates with
high selectivity, they often exhibit narrow substrate scope, thus
limiting their broader application. In the present study, we investigated
the reactivity of the P450 MycCI from the mycinamicin biosynthetic
pathway toward a variety of macrocyclic compounds and discovered that
the enzyme exhibits appreciable activity on several 16-membered ring
macrolactones independent of their glycosylation state. These results
were corroborated by performing equilibrium substrate binding experiments,
steady-state kinetics studies, and X-ray crystallographic analysis
of MycCI bound to its native substrate mycinamicin VIII. We also characterized
TylHI, a homologous P450 from the tylosin pathway, and showed that
its substrate scope is severely restricted compared to MycCI. Thus,
the ability of the latter to hydroxylate both macrocyclic aglycones
and macrolides sets it apart from related biosynthetic P450s and highlights
its potential for developing novel P450 biocatalysts with broad substrate
scope and high regioselectivity
Evolution of Efficient Modular Polyketide Synthases by Homologous Recombination
The structural scaffolds of many
complex natural products are produced
by multifunctional type I polyketide synthase (PKS) enzymes that operate
as biosynthetic assembly lines. The modular nature of these mega-enzymes
presents an opportunity to construct custom biocatalysts built in
a lego-like fashion by inserting, deleting, or exchanging native or
foreign domains to produce targeted variants of natural polyketides.
However, previously engineered PKS enzymes are often impaired resulting
in limited production compared to native systems. Here, we show a
versatile method for generating and identifying functional chimeric
PKS enzymes for synthesizing custom macrolactones and macrolides.
PKS genes from the pikromycin and erythromycin pathways were hybridized
in Saccharomyces cerevisiae to generate
hybrid libraries. We used a 96-well plate format for plasmid purification,
transformations, sequencing, protein expression, in vitro reactions
and analysis of metabolite formation. Active chimeric enzymes were
identified with new functionality. Streptomyces venezuelae strains that expressed these PKS chimeras were capable of producing
engineered macrolactones. Furthermore, a macrolactone generated from
selected PKS chimeras was fully functionalized into a novel macrolide
analogue. This method permits the engineering of PKS pathways as modular
building blocks for the production of new antibiotic-like molecules
Evolution of Efficient Modular Polyketide Synthases by Homologous Recombination
The structural scaffolds of many
complex natural products are produced
by multifunctional type I polyketide synthase (PKS) enzymes that operate
as biosynthetic assembly lines. The modular nature of these mega-enzymes
presents an opportunity to construct custom biocatalysts built in
a lego-like fashion by inserting, deleting, or exchanging native or
foreign domains to produce targeted variants of natural polyketides.
However, previously engineered PKS enzymes are often impaired resulting
in limited production compared to native systems. Here, we show a
versatile method for generating and identifying functional chimeric
PKS enzymes for synthesizing custom macrolactones and macrolides.
PKS genes from the pikromycin and erythromycin pathways were hybridized
in Saccharomyces cerevisiae to generate
hybrid libraries. We used a 96-well plate format for plasmid purification,
transformations, sequencing, protein expression, in vitro reactions
and analysis of metabolite formation. Active chimeric enzymes were
identified with new functionality. Streptomyces venezuelae strains that expressed these PKS chimeras were capable of producing
engineered macrolactones. Furthermore, a macrolactone generated from
selected PKS chimeras was fully functionalized into a novel macrolide
analogue. This method permits the engineering of PKS pathways as modular
building blocks for the production of new antibiotic-like molecules
Structural Basis of Substrate Specificity and Regiochemistry in the MycF/TylF Family of Sugar <i>O</i>‑Methyltransferases.
Sugar moieties in natural products
are frequently modified by <i>O</i>-methylation. In the
biosynthesis of the macrolide antibiotic
mycinamicin, methylation of a 6′-deoxyallose substituent occurs
in a stepwise manner first at the 2′- and then the 3′-hydroxyl
groups to produce the mycinose moiety in the final product. The timing
and placement of the <i>O</i>-methylations impact final
stage C–H functionalization reactions mediated by the P450
monooxygenase MycG. The structural basis of pathway ordering and substrate
specificity is unknown. A series of crystal structures of MycF, the
3′-<i>O</i>-methyltransferase, including the free
enzyme and complexes with <i>S</i>-adenosyl homocysteine
(SAH), substrate, product, and unnatural substrates, show that SAM
binding induces substantial ordering that creates the binding site
for the natural substrate, and a bound metal ion positions the substrate
for catalysis. A single amino acid substitution relaxed the 2′-methoxy
specificity but retained regiospecificity. The engineered variant
produced a new mycinamicin analog, demonstrating the utility of structural
information to facilitate bioengineering approaches for the chemoenzymatic
synthesis of complex small molecules containing modified sugars. Using
the MycF substrate complex and the modeled substrate complex of a
4′-specific homologue, active site residues were identified
that correlate with the 3′ or 4′ specificity of MycF
family members and define the protein and substrate features that
direct the regiochemistry of methyltransfer. This classification scheme
will be useful in the annotation of new secondary metabolite pathways
that utilize this family of enzymes
Chemoenzymatic Total Synthesis and Structural Diversification of Tylactone-Based Macrolide Antibiotics through Late-Stage Polyketide Assembly, Tailoring, and Cî—¸H Functionalization
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%