Biosynthetic
Studies of Telomycin Reveal New Lipopeptides with Enhanced Activity
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Abstract
Telomycin
(TEM) is a cyclic depsipeptide antibiotic active against Gram-positive
bacteria. In this study, five new natural telomycin analogues produced
by <i>Streptomyces canus</i> ATCC 12646 were identified.
To understand the biosynthetic machinery of telomycin and to generate
more analogues by pathway engineering, the TEM biosynthesis gene cluster
has been characterized from <i>S. canus</i> ATCC 12646:
it spans approximately 80.5 kb and consists of 34 genes encoding fatty
acid ligase, nonribosomal peptide synthetases (NRPSs), regulators,
transporters, and tailoring enzymes. The gene cluster was heterologously
expressed in <i>Streptomyces albus</i> J1074 setting the
stage for convenient biosynthetic engineering, mutasynthesis, and
production optimization. Moreover, in-frame deletions of one hydroxylase
and two P450 monooxygenase genes resulted in the production of novel
telomycin derivatives, revealing these genes to be responsible for
the specific modification by hydroxylation of three amino acids found
in the TEM backbone. Surprisingly, natural lipopeptide telomycin precursors
were identified when characterizing an unusual precursor deacylation
mechanism during telomycin maturation. By <i>in vivo</i> gene inactivation and <i>in vitro</i> biochemical characterization
of the recombinant enzyme Tem25, the maturation process was shown
to involve the cleavage of previously unknown telomycin precursor-lipopeptides,
to yield 6-methylheptanoic acid and telomycins. These lipopeptides
were isolated from an inactivation mutant of <i>tem25</i> encoding a (de)acylase, structurally elucidated, and then shown
to be deacylated by recombinant Tem25. The TEM precursor and several
semisynthetic lipopeptide TEM derivatives showed rapid bactericidal
killing and were active against several multidrug-resistant (MDR)
Gram-positive pathogens, opening the path to future chemical optimization
of telomycin for pharmaceutical application