| Literature DB >> 28009004 |
Ling Gao1, Hongxia Liu1, Zhi Ma1, Jinzhi Han1, Zhaoxin Lu1, Chen Dai2, Fengxia Lv1, Xiaomei Bie1.
Abstract
Non-ribosomal peptide synthetases (NRPSs) are large enzymatic complexes that catalyse the synthesis of biologically active peptides in microorganisms. Genetic engineering has recently been applied to reprogram NRPSs to produce lipopeptides with a new sequence. The carboxyl-terminal thioesterase (TE) domains from NRPSs catalyse cleavage products by hydrolysis or complex macrocyclization. In this study, we modified plipastatin synthetase by moving the intrinsic TE region to the end of the internal thiolation (T) domains, thus generating Bacillus subtilis strains that could produce new truncated cyclic or linear peptides of the predicted sequence, which further provided an important insight into the regioselectivity of plipastatin TE. The TE was capable of recognizing and catalysing the lactone formation between L-Try3 with the last few residues L-Pro7 and L-Gln8 at the C-terminus. Additionally, the unmatched linkers connecting the TE region and T domain resulted in nonproduction strains, suggesting that the native T-TE linker is necessary and sufficient for the TE domain to release the products from the hybrid enzymes. This is the first report to demonstrate truncated cyclic lipopeptides production and module skipping by simply moving the TE domain forward in an NRPS system.Entities:
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Year: 2016 PMID: 28009004 PMCID: PMC5180189 DOI: 10.1038/srep38467
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379
Figure 1Structure of plipastatin (PubChem CID:102466606) and schematic diagram of the plipastatin biosynthesis operon (pps).
Five NRPSs are encoded by the genes ppsABCDE. Based on their function, the five distinct synthetases, PpsA–E, can be divided into modules and domains. Each module is comprised of condensation (C), adenylation (A), thiolation (T), and epimerization (E) domains that are responsible for the activation, attachment, and modification of one constitutive amino acid residue. At module 10, a terminal thioesterase (TE) domain catalyses linear peptide cyclization and releases the final product, plipastatin.
Strains and plasmids.
| Strain or plasmid | Relevant characteristic | Reference or source |
|---|---|---|
| pB2 | Chester Price’ lab (UCDavis, USA) | |
| pB2-L | Constructed and characterized in our lab, stored in CGMCC (No. 11723) | |
| LP1 | This study | |
| LP2 | This study | |
| LP3 | This study | |
| LP4 | This study | |
| LP5 | This study | |
| LP6 | This study | |
| DH5α | Vazyme (Nanjing, China) | |
| JM110 | F’, | Transgen Biolabs (Beijing, China) |
| Plasmids | ||
| pMD19T-simple | TA cloning vector; ApR | TaKaRa (Dalian, China) |
| pKS2 | Thermosensitive vector; KanR, ErmR | |
| pKS-7ProTTE | 7ProTlinker-TE fragment inserted into pKS2, KanR, ErmR | This study |
| pKS-8GlnTTE | 8GlnTlinker-TE fragment inserted into pKS2, KanR, ErmR | This study |
| pKS-9TyrTTE | 9TyrTlinker-TE fragment inserted into pKS2, KanR, ErmR | This study |
| pKS-7ProTELong | 7ProTTELong fragment inserted into pKS2, KanR, ErmR | This study |
| pKS-8GlnTELong | 8GlnTTELong fragment inserted into pKS2, KanR, ErmR | This study |
| pKS-9TyrTELong | 9TyrTTELong fragment inserted into pKS2, KanR, ErmR | This study |
aCmR, ApR, KanR, ErmR: resistant to chloramphenicol, ampicillin, kanamycin, and erythromycin, respectively.
Srf– Pps–: unable to synthesize either surfactin or plipastatin.
Figure 2The linkers connecting the thioesterase (TE) domain with various thiolation (T) domains in new hybrid non-ribosomal peptide synthetases.
The 7ProT-C, 8GlnT-C, and 9TyrT-E linkers were connected to the TE domain, respectively (A–C). TELong, containing the native 10IleT-TE linker, was connecting to different T domains of the PPSD subunit (D–F). 7ProT-C: linker region between the T domain of module 7 and the condensation (C) domain of module 8. 8GlnT-C: linker region between the T domain of module 8 and the C domain of module 9. 9TyrT-E: linker region between the T and epimerization (E) domains in module 9.
Truncated lipopeptides produced by recombinant B. subtilis strains.
| Strain | Mass ions detected by LC-MS | Peptide sequence | Products |
|---|---|---|---|
| pB2-L | 1435.8, 1449.8, 1463.8, 1477.8, 1491.8, 1505.8, 1519.8, 1533.8 | (C14–21)β-OHFA-E-O-Cyclo(Y-T-E-A/V-P-Q-Y-I/V) | Plipastatin |
| LP4 | 1105.6, 1119.6, 1133.7, 1147.7 | Linear (C16–19)β-OHFA-E-O-Y-T-E-V-P | Linear heptapeptides |
| 1087.6, 1101.6, 1115.7, 1129.7 | (C16–19)β-OHFA-E-O-cyclo(Y-T-E-V-P) | Cyclic heptapeptides | |
| LP5 | 1233.7, 1247.7 | Linear (C16–17)β-OHFA-E-O-Y-T-E-V-P-Q | Linear octapetides |
| 1229.7, 1243.7, 1257.7 | (C17–19)β-OHFA-E-O-cyclo(Y-T-E-V-P-Q) | Cyclic octapeptides | |
| LP6 | 1382.7, 1396.8, 1410.8 | Linear (C15–17)β-OHFA-E-O-Y-T-E-V-P-Q-Y | Linear nonapeptides |
| 1219.7, 1233.7, 1247.7 | Linear (C15–17)β-OHFA-E-O-Y-T-E-V-P-Q | Linear octapeptides | |
| 1215.7, 1229.7, 1243.7, 1257.7 | (C16–19)β-OHFA-E-O-cyclo(Y-T-E-V-P-Q) | Cyclic octapeptides |
Figure 3Liquid chromatography-electrospray ionization-tandem mass spectra of [M + H]+ ions of the linear heptapeptide at 1119.65 m/z (A) and the cyclic heptapeptide at 1101.65 m/z (B).
Figure 4Liquid chromatography-electrospray ionization-tandem mass spectra of [M + H]+ ions of the linear octapeptide at 1247.72 m/z (A) and the cyclic octapeptide at 1229.71 m/z (B).
Figure 5Liquid chromatography-electrospray ionization-tandem mass spectra of [M + H]+ ions of the linear nonapeptide at 1410.78 m/z.