| Literature DB >> 23989727 |
Stephanie A Vanner1, Xiang Li, Rostyslav Zvanych, Jonathon Torchia, Jing Sang, David W Andrews, Nathan A Magarvey.
Abstract
Evolution of natural products, and particularly those resulting from microbial assembly line-like enzymes, such as polyketide (PK) and nonribosomal peptides (NRP), has resulted in a variety of pharmaceutically important and chemically diverse families of molecules. The antimycin-type depsipeptides are one such grouping, with a significant level of diversity and members that have noted activities against key targets governing human cellular apoptosis (e.g. Bcl-xL and GRP78). Chemical variance originates from ring size, with 9-, 12-, 15-, and 18-membered classes, and we show that such distinctions influence their molecular targeting. Further, we present here a systematic interrogation of the chemistry and assembly line evolution of antimycin-type analogues by conducting metabolomic profiling and biosynthetic gene cluster comparative analysis of the depsipeptide assembly lines for each member of the antimycin-group. Natural molecular evolution principles of such studies should assist in artificial re-combinatorializing of PK and NRP assembly lines.Entities:
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2013 PMID: 23989727 DOI: 10.1039/c3mb70219g
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Mol Biosyst ISSN: 1742-2051