Tailoring Enzymes Involved in the Biosynthesis of Angucyclines Contain Latent Context-Dependent Catalytic Activities




Patrikainen P, Kallio P, Fan KQ, Klika KD, Shaaban KA, Mantsala P, Rohr J, Yang KQ, Niemi J, Metsa-Ketela M

PublisherCELL PRESS

2012

Chemistry and Biology

CHEMISTRY & BIOLOGY

CHEM BIOL

5

19

5

647

655

9

1074-5521

DOIhttps://doi.org/10.1016/j.chembiol.2012.04.010



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.




Last updated on 2024-26-11 at 15:20