Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
1391246 Chemistry & Biology 2012 10 Pages PDF
Abstract

SummaryBottromycins represent a promising class of antibiotics binding to the therapeutically unexploited A-site of the bacterial ribosome. By inhibiting translation they are active against clinically important pathogens, such as vancomycin-resistant Enterococci. Structurally, bottromycins are heavily modified peptides exhibiting various unusual biosynthetic features. To set the stage for compound modification and yield optimization, we identified the biosynthetic gene cluster, used synthetic biotechnology approaches to establish and improve heterologous production, and generated analogs by pathway genetic engineering. We unambiguously identified three radical SAM methyltransferase-encoding genes required for various methylations at unactivated carbons yielding tert-butyl valine, methyl-proline, and β-methyl-phenylalanine residues, plus a gene involved in aspartate methyl-ester formation. Evidence for the formation of the exo-thiazole unit and for a macrocyclodehydration mechanism leading to amidine ring formation is provided.

► Ribosomal bottromycin biosynthesis based on a leader-less precursor peptide ► Evidence for a unique macrocyclodehydration via amidine ring formation ► Heterologous production and yield optimization ► Functional studies on unusual methylations by three radical SAM enzymes

Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering Chemistry Organic Chemistry
Authors
, , , , ,