A1 Refereed original research article in a scientific journal
Tailoring Enzymes Involved in the Biosynthesis of Angucyclines Contain Latent Context-Dependent Catalytic Activities
Authors: Patrikainen P, Kallio P, Fan KQ, Klika KD, Shaaban KA, Mantsala P, Rohr J, Yang KQ, Niemi J, Metsa-Ketela M
Publisher: CELL PRESS
Publication year: 2012
Journal: Chemistry and Biology
Journal name in source: CHEMISTRY & BIOLOGY
Journal acronym: CHEM BIOL
Number in series: 5
Volume: 19
Issue: 5
First page : 647
Last page: 655
Number of pages: 9
ISSN: 1074-5521
DOI: https://doi.org/10.1016/j.chembiol.2012.04.010(external)
Comparison of homologous angucycline modification enzymes from five closely related Streptomyces pathways (pga, cab, lad, urd, lan) allowed us to deduce the biosynthetic steps responsible for the three alternative outcomes: gaudimycin C, dehydrorabelomycin, and 11-deoxylandomycinone. The C-12b-hydroxylated urdamycin and gaudimycin metabolites appear to be the ancestral representatives from which landomycins and jadomysins have evolved as a result of functional divergence of the ketoreductase LanV and hydroxylase JadH, respectively. Specifically, LanV has acquired affinity for an earlier biosynthetic intermediate resulting in a switch in biosynthetic order and lack of hydroxyls at C-4a and C-12b, whereas in JadH, C-4a/C-12b dehydration has evolved into an independent secondary function replacing C-12b hydroxylation. Importantly, the study reveals that many of the modification enzymes carry several alternative, hidden, or ancestral catalytic functions, which are strictly dependent on the biosynthetic context.