| Literature DB >> 25712404 |
Dorota Jakubczyk1, Lorenzo Caputi, Anaëlle Hatsch, Curt A F Nielsen, Melanie Diefenbacher, Jens Klein, Andrea Molt, Hartwig Schröder, Johnathan Z Cheng, Michael Naesby, Sarah E O'Connor.
Abstract
The ergot alkaloids, a class of fungal-derived natural products with important biological activities, are derived from a common intermediate, chanoclavine-I, which is elaborated into a set of diverse structures. Herein we report the discovery of the biosynthetic pathway of cycloclavine, a complex ergot alkaloid containing a cyclopropyl moiety. We used a yeast-based expression platform along with in vitro biochemical experiments to identify the enzyme that catalyzes a rearrangement of the chanoclavine-I intermediate to form a cyclopropyl moiety. The resulting compound, cycloclavine, was produced in yeast at titers of >500 mg L(-1) , thus demonstrating the feasibility of the heterologous expression of these complex alkaloids.Entities:
Keywords: biosynthesis; cyclopropyl group; ergot alkaloids; natural products; pathway reconstitution
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2015 PMID: 25712404 PMCID: PMC4471609 DOI: 10.1002/anie.201410002
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Angew Chem Int Ed Engl ISSN: 1433-7851 Impact factor: 15.336
Figure 1Ergot-alkaloid biosynthetic pathway. a) Biosynthesis of festuclavine (4), agroclavine (5), and cycloclavine (6) from l-tryptophan and dimethylallyl pyrophosphate (DMAPP). b) LC–MS chromatograms showing that EasA, EasG, and EasH are required to generate cycloclavine (6) from chanoclavine-I aldehyde (3). i–iv) Authentic standards of chanoclavine-I aldehyde (3; i), agroclavine (5; ii), festuclavine (4; iii), and cycloclavine (6, iv). v, vi) Reaction products from the incubation of Aj_EasA, Aj_EasG, and Aj_EasH with chanoclavine-I aldehyde (3) and cofactors: v) by-product, festuclavine (4); vi) predominant enzymatic product, cycloclavine (6).
Figure 2Production of cycloclavine (6) in yeast. a) i) Total ion current (TIC) chromatogram from S. cerevisiae expressing the entire cycloclavine cluster; ii) chromatogram showing the compound produced by an engineered strain of S. cerevisiae with an extracted [M+H]+ value of 239.154; iii) chromatogram showing cycloclavine (6) from Aspergillus japonicus with the same mass. b) Extracted ion chromatograms ([M+H]+=239.154) and mass fragmentations of compounds from i, iii) S. cerevisiae, expressing the cycloclavine cluster, and ii, iv) the native producer A. japonicus. c) Fermentation of S. cerevisiae, with the production of a final titer of 529 mg L−1 of cycloclavine (6) and 89 mg L−1 of festuclavine (4).
Scheme 1Proposed mechanisms of cycloclavine formation. EasA is an Old Yellow Enzyme homologue, EasG is an NADPH-dependent reductase, and EasH is annotated as an α-ketoglutarate-dependent, non-heme iron oxygenase; R=OH or Cl. a) EasH hydroxylates or halogenates 9. b) EasH abstracts a hydride ion from 9. c) EasH abstracts a hydrogen atom from 9.