Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
10588006 | Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2013 | 4 Pages |
Abstract
Gentamicin is an aminoglycoside antibiotic obtained from cultures of Micromonospora as the important anti-infective agents. Gentamicin which lacks 3â²-hydroxyl group can avoid the attack from the modification enzymes of antibiotic-resistant bacteria in clinic. Consequently, C-3â² dehydroxylation is the key step in gentamicins biosynthesis. We suppose that there are some enzymes responsible for converting intermediate JI-20A to 3â²,4â²-bisdehydroxylated final product gentamicin C1a, while phosphorylation of 3â²-OH is possibly the first step for C-3â² dehydroxylation. The gentamicin biosynthetic gene gntI, encoding an aminoglycoside phosphotransferase, was cloned from Micromonospora echinospora ATCC15835 and overexpressed in Escherichia coli. The resulting phosphotransferase was purified, and the kinetic parameters for Kanamycin A, Kanamycin B, Neomycin B and Amikacin were determined. Elucidation of NMR data of phosphorylated kanamycin B has unambiguously demonstrated a regiospecific phosphorylation of 3â²-hydroxyl of the 6-aminohexose ring. The results described here partly confirm that the 3â²-dehydroxylation step is preceded by a 3â² phosphorylation step. It is predicted that GntI belongs to a new aminoglycoside phosphotransferase group involved with aminoglycoside antibiotics biosynthesis pathway.
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Authors
Lei Shao, Junsheng Chen, Chunxia Wang, Ji-an Li, Yumin Tang, Daijie Chen, Wen Liu,