Literature DB >> 29511509

Biosynthesis of trioxacarcin revealing a different starter unit and complex tailoring steps for type II polyketide synthase.

Mei Zhang1, Xian-Feng Hou1, Li-Hua Qi1, Yue Yin1, Qing Li1, Hai-Xue Pan1, Xin-Ya Chen1, Gong-Li Tang1,2.   

Abstract

Trioxacarcins (TXNs) are highly oxygenated, polycyclic aromatic natural products with remarkable biological activity and structural complexity. Evidence from 13C-labelled precursor feeding studies demonstrated that the scaffold was biosynthesized from one unit of l-isoleucine and nine units of malonyl-CoA, which suggested a different starter unit in the biosynthesis. Genetic analysis of the biosynthetic gene cluster revealed 56 genes encoding a type II polyketide synthase (PKS), combined with a large amount of tailoring enzymes. Inactivation of seven post-PKS modification enzymes resulted in the production of a series of new TXN analogues, intermediates, and shunt products, most of which show high anti-cancer activity. Structural elucidation of these new compounds not only helps us to propose the biosynthetic pathway, featuring a type II PKS using a novel starter unit, but also set the stage for further characterization of the enzymatic reactions and combinatorial biosynthesis.

Entities:  

Year:  2015        PMID: 29511509      PMCID: PMC5659172          DOI: 10.1039/c5sc00116a

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Chem Sci        ISSN: 2041-6520            Impact factor:   9.825


Introduction

Microorganisms can produce a large variety of biologically active secondary metabolites representing a vast diversity of fascinating molecular architecture, which usually attract attention for chemical synthesis, mode of action, biosynthesis, and even drug discovery studies. As an example, trioxacarcin A (TXN-A, 1, Fig. 1) represents a special family of complex aromatic natural products, which was first isolated from Streptomyces bottropensis DO-45 (NRRL 12051) in 1981,1–3 and subsequently re-isolated from a marine Streptomyces sp. B8652 with a series of analogues in 2004.4,5 It displays extraordinary anti-bacterial, anti-malarial, and anti-tumor activity with sub-nanomolar IC70 values in various cancer cell lines.1–5 Structurally, TXN-A contains an unusual condensed polycyclic trisketal, bearing a fused spiro-epoxide, which is believed to be a “warhead” to covalently bind to DNA, followed by cleavage of the resultant TXN–DNA complex, to yield another natural product gutingimycin (3, Fig. 1) through an abstraction of the guanine.6,7 In addition, it has unique glycosylation patterns, including a rare γ-branched octose.
Fig. 1

Chemical structure of trioxacarcin (TXN) and relative natural products.

The high biological activities, especial anti-cancer activity, along with unusual and complex structural features of TXN-A distinguish it from other aromatic polyketides, thus providing an interesting but challenging target for total synthesis. Recently, Myers's group successfully established a multiply convergent, component-based route to chemically synthesize TXN-A and its structural analogues.8,9 However, the biosynthetic studies have never been explored to these structurally complex antibiotics. Herein, we describe (1) incorporation studies with 13C-labelled precursors, which elucidated the biosynthetic origin of the scaffold for the TXN family of natural products; (2) the genetic characterization of txn gene cluster, which afforded four polyketide derivates and seven TXN analogues; and (3) a proposed biosynthetic pathway, involving a different starter unit for priming type II polyketide synthase (PKS) and complex tailoring steps.

Results and discussion

Biosynthetic origin of the polycyclic scaffold of TXNs

TXN-A was originally isolated from S. bottropensis DO-45 with the isolation of 20 mg from an 18 L fermentation broth;1,2 however this titer was not efficient enough for biosynthetic studies. In our early efforts to optimize the fermentation and isolation processes, we noticed that the yield of TXN-A could be significantly improved by a hundred times through the addition of the hydrophobic resin HP-20 into the fermentation medium, even up to titers of 100–200 mg L–1 in shaking flasks.10 Under this optimized condition, the precursors [1-13C]-acetate, [2-13C]-acetate, and [1,2-13C]-acetate were added to a fermentation culture (a total of 0.7 g L–1) by pulse feeding after 48, 56, 64, 72, 80, 88 h of incubation in separate incorporation experiments, and the fermentation lasted 120 h. TXN-A isolated from the feeding fermentations was subjected to 13C-NMR analysis to confirm the polyketide extender units of the scaffold (ESI, Table S1†). All the 13C abundance at each position of the TXN-A backbone could be sufficiently separated and identified (ESI, Fig. S1†). These incorporation results are summarized in Table S1† and Fig. 2A. Significant enrichment was observed at C-1, C-3, C-4a, C-6, C-8, C-9, C-10a, and C-11 in the [1-13C]-acetate labelled TXN-A, as well as C-2, C-4, C-5, C-7, C-8a, C-9a, C-10, C-12, and C-18 in the [2-13C]-acetate labelled TXN-A; both suggested the folding pattern of the polyketide chain in Fig. 2A, which was further supported by the [1,2-13C]-acetate feeding results (Fig. S1 and Table S1†). Obviously, the right ring contains three malonate-derived intact acetate units (C-9a to C-1, C-2 to C-3, and C-4 to C-4a), which suggested the folding pattern of the polyketide chain could be classified as a typical Streptomyces mode.11 In addition, the incorporation of the [2-13C]-acetate to C-18 indicated that a decarboxylation step should be involved in the formation of a fused-ring skeleton. However, the labelled pattern of the five-carbon fragment (C-13, C-14, C-15, C-16, and C-17) remains confused, which hints that this five-carbon unit may be derived from another origin. Moreover, the five-carbon unit was likely employed by the type II PKS as a non-acetate starter unit to generate the polyketide in which the decarboxylation is usually performed on the last carbon of the fully elongated polyketide chain.
Fig. 2

Characterization of the biosynthetic origin of TXNs by precursor feeding experiments. (A) Summary of feeding results with 13C-labeled sodium acetate and 13C6-l-isoleucine (Ile). (B) MS analysis of production of TXN by fermentation without (I) or with 13C6-l-Ile (II). (C) 13C-NMR spectra of TXN-A with (II) and without (I) feeding of 13C6-l-Ile. The enhanced signals of C-13, C-14, C15, C-16, and C-17 are marked. (D) The enlarged parts of 13C-NMR spectra from feeding experiment.

A five-carbon unit (C-13 to C-17), most possibly from 2-methylbutyryl-CoA, serving as the starter unit of PKS, is seldom observed in natural product biosynthesis. The only exception is involved in the biosynthesis of avermectin “a” components, which are 16-membered macrocyclic lactones generated by type I PKS through loading 2-methylbutyryl-CoA as the starter unit.12 For the type II PKS, although non-acetate starter units, including propionate, malonamate, polyketide or fatty acid, and even amino acid derivates have also been employed,13 2-methylbutyryl-CoA has never been reported as a starter unit to generate aromatic polyketides. Given the fact that 2-methylbutyryl-CoA is usually derived from l-isoleucine (Ile) through deamination and decarboxylation by transaminase and branched-chain 2-oxo acid dehydrogenase in vivo, we performed the feeding experiment with 13C6-l-Ile to validate this hypothesis (Fig. 2A). Remarkably, ESI-MS showed TXN-A from this feeding experiment was +5 m/z heavier than that without feeding (Fig. 2B), indicating the incorporation of a five-carbon unit which arose from an intact Ile. Further specific and significant signal enrichment at C-13 to C-17 (Fig. 2C) in the 13C-NMR spectra, and all the 13C13C coupling data (Fig. 2D) are consistent with the same conclusion (JC-16/C-15 = 62 Hz, JC-15/C-14 = 58 Hz, JC-13/C-14 = 54 Hz, and JC-17/C-14 = 32 Hz), which are in agreement with this five-carbon unit originating from Ile via an intact incorporation manner. Thus, these results unambiguously demonstrated that the missing five-carbon unit, C-13 to C-17, is derived from l-Ile, which most likely follows a deamination and decarboxylation process similar to that of the avermectin “a” components biosynthesis.12

Cloning, sequencing, and identification of the biosynthetic gene cluster of TXNs

The aromatic polycyclic skeleton of TXNs and the primary 13C-labeled acetate feeding experiments suggest that a type-II PKS should be involved in the biosynthesis. Therefore, we cloned the gene cluster by the PCR approach specific for accessing the genes encoding a ketosynthase (KS)-chain length factor (CLF) heterodimer.14 By screening the genomic library and the subsequent chromosome walking, a 102 kb contiguous DNA sequence was mapped into three overlapping fosmids (pTG5001, pTG5002 and pTG5003, Fig. 3A). Sequencing and bioinformatic analysis of these fosmids revealed 91 ORFs, most of which (the txn gene cluster) are deposited in the GenBank under the accession no. KP410250.
Fig. 3

Biosynthetic gene cluster and proposed biosynthetic pathway of TXN-A and relative metabolites. (A) Localization of the cloned DNA region as represented by three overlapping fosmids and organization of the txn gene cluster. Color coding indicates the genes for the PKS and PKS associated enzymes (pink), tailoring enzymes (red), deoxysugar (blue), regulators and resistant proteins (green), and all others (black). (B) Proposed model for type II PKS and post-PKS modification. (C) Proposed biosynthetic pathway of two deoxysugar moieties. The significant points of the pathway were highlighted by colored circles.

To verify that the cloned gene cluster was involved in TXNs biosynthesis, we constructed a mutant strain TG5001 in which the txnA1 gene encoding KS was inactivated by gene disruption (ESI, Fig. S2†). As expected, this mutant strain completely abolished the production of TXN-A (Fig. 4A-II), which proved the essential role of this gene cluster governing TXN biosynthesis. Next inactivation of the genes orf–2 (acyltransferase), orf–1 (unknown), orf+11 (cytochrome P450), and orf+3 (tRNA-synthetase) had no effect on TXN-A production; whereas, inactivation of txnRg1 (regulator) or txnRg6 (regulator) led to obviously decreased the yield of TXN-A (Fig. 4A-III to VIII), which suggested that the txn gene cluster may range from txnRg1 to txnRg6, encompassing 56 ORFs (Fig. 3A and Table 1).
Fig. 4

Genetic characterization of the genes for TXN biosynthesis in vivo. HPLC analysis of TXN-A and analogues production (UV at 271 nm) from S. bottropensis: (I) wild-type NRRL 12051, (A-II) mutant TG5001 (ΔtxnA1), (A-III) TG5002 (Δorf–3), (A-IV) TG5003 (Δorf–1), (A-V) TG5004 (ΔtxnRg1), (A-VI) TG5005 (Δorf+11), (A-VII) TG5006 (Δorf+3), (A-VIII) TG5007 (ΔtxnRg6), (A-VIV) TG5008 (ΔtxnA4); (B-II) TG5009 (ΔtxnC2), (B-III) TG5010 (ΔtxnC4), (B-IV) TG5011 (ΔtxnC3), (B-V) TG5012 (ΔtxnO2), (B-VI) TG5013 (ΔtxnO5), (B-VII) TG5014 (ΔtxnO6), (B-VIII) TG5015 (ΔtxnO12), (B-VIV) TG5016 (ΔtxnB4). () TXN-A. The genotypes of all the mutants were confirmed by PCR analysis, and the results were summarized in Fig. S2.†

Table 1

Deduced functions of ORFs in txn biosynthetic gene cluster

GeneAA a Protein homolog (accession no.), origin S/I b (%)Proposed function
txnRg194LuxR family regulator (016578673), S. albulus65/55Regulator
txnB1330ChlC2 (AAZ77689), S. antibioticus76/67dTDP-glucose 4,6-dehydratase
txnB2290AclY (BAB72036), S. galilaeus86/74dTDP-glucose synthase
txnB3327KstD7 (AFJ52686), Micromonospora sp. TP-A046876/66Pyruvate dehydrogenase-α
txnB4345KstD8 (AFJ52687), Micromonospora sp. TP-A046886/79Pyruvate dehydrogenase-β
txnA4561OxyP (AAZ78339), S. rimosus64/53MAT
txnA390SsfC (ADE34520), S. sp. SF257576/53ACP
txnA2406Snoa2 (CAA12018), S. nogalater77/66CLF (KSβ)
txnA1420PgaA (AAK57525), S. sp. PGA6484/72KSα
txnRg2263DnrI (EFL25867), S. himastatinicus ATCC 5365378/63SARP-family regulator
txnRg33942-Component kinase (ADO32765), S. vietnamensis54/402-Component kinase
txnRg42032-Component regulator (CAA09631), S. violaceoruber82/692-Component regulator
txnP1579RkA (ACZ65474), S. sp. 88-68257/43ATP-dependent CoA synthetase
txnC1318ORF27 (AEM44304), e-DNA64/50Aromatase
txnA5344CosE (ABC00733), S. olindensis70/58KS-III
txnP25432-Isopropylmalate synthase (ACY99077), Thermomonospora curvata DSM 4318370/582-Isopropylmalate synthase
txnP3417Acyl-CoA transferase/dehydratase (EIE99664), S. glauca K6267/56Dehydratase or isomerase
txnP4260Ketoreductase (EDY66493), S. pristinaespiralis ATCC 2548663/46Short-chain dehydrogenase
txnRr1500Actinorhodin transporter (EFL40860), S. griseoflavus Tu400064/48Transporter
txnO1345Dehydrogenase (ACZ83978), Streptosporangium roseum DSM4302174/61Dehydrogenase
txnU1126Tcur_2795 (ACY98340), Thermomonospora curvata DSM 4318340/33Unknown
txnO2401P450 (CBX53644), S. platensis66/52Cytochrome P450
txnU2366O3I_28241 (EHY24336), Nocardia brasiliensis ATCC 70035869/53Unknown
txnO3411ThcD (AAC45752), Rhodococcus erythropolis62/48Ferredoxin reductase
txnO41072Fe-2S ferredoxin (ZP_09514545), Oceanicola sp. S12468/52Ferredoxin
txnH1494Putative tripeptidylaminopeptidase (AAP85358), S. griseoruber68/59Hydrolase
txnO5409ORF29 (AAP85338), S. griseoruber68/53Cytochrome P450
txnH2373Microsomal epoxide hydrolase (EHI80707), Frankia sp. CN368/56Epoxide hydrolase
txnB5328PokS9 (ACN64856), S. diastatochromogenes70/60dNDP-hexose-4-ketoreductase
txnB6213PokS7 (ACN64855), S. diastatochromogenes82/723,5-Epimerase
txnM1413TylCIII (AAD41823), S. fradiae84/73dNDP-hexose 3-C-MT
txnB7488SaqS (ACP19377), Micromonospora sp. Tu 636871/62dNDP-hexose 2,3-dehydratase
txnB8321SaqT (ACP19378), Micromonospora sp. Tu 636870/62dNDP-hexose 3-ketoreductase
txnRr2500EmrB/QacA (EGE43895), S. griseus XylebKG175/59Transporter
txnRg5339DeoR regulator (ACZ87003), Streptosporangium roseum DSM4302177/70Regulator
txnO6406ORF3 (AAD28449), S. lavendulae63/45Cytochrome P450
txnO7175PokC1 (ACN64848), S. diastatochromogenes45/35Cyclase or hydroxylase
txnO8371AlnT (ACI88867), S. sp. CM02057/43Hydroxylase
txnO9154CalC (AAM70338), Micromonospora echinospora50/36Cyclase or hydroxylase
txnC2261HedA (AAP85364), S. griseoruber83/71Ketoreductase
txnO10178AsuE2 (ADI58638), S. nodosus subsp. asukaensis57/43Flavin reductase
txnC3304Gra-ORF33 (ADO32793), S. vietnamensis68/562,3-Cyclase
txnB9383SsfS6 (ADE34512), S. sp. SF257555/38Glycosyl transferase
txnO11148Aln2 (ACI88858), S. sp. CM02052/41Cyclase or hydroxylase
txnU3121GrhI (AAM33661), S. sp. JP9546/28Unknown
txnB10424UrdGTa1 (AAF00214), S. fradiae61/47Glycosyl transferase
txnC4240RedLA2 (AAT45284), S. tubercidicus82/73Ketoreductase
txnM2340MetLA2 (AAT45283), S. tubercidicus79/70 O-Methyltransferase
txnU4388PAI11_01900 (EHN12885), Patulibacter sp. I1182/69Unknown
txnB11397Azi15 (ABY83154), S. sahachiroi63/50 O-Acyltransferase
txnB12427UrdGTa1 (AAF00214), S. fradiae61/47Glycosyl transferase
txnM3339DmpM (AFE08598), Corallococcus coralloides DSM 225962/45 O-Methyltransferase
txnO12407FosK (AEC13077), S. pulveraceus67/54Cytochrome P450
txnM4340DmpM (AFE08598), Corallococcus coralloides DSM 225961/44 O-Methyltransferase
txnU5182RAM_06565 (AEK39805), Amycolatopsis mediterranei S69975/64Unknown
txnRg6286SARP regulator (ACU39492), Actinosynnema mirum DSM 4382753/40Regulator

Amino acid.

Similarity/identity.

Amino acid. Similarity/identity.

PKS and polyketide processing enzymes in TXN-A scaffold biosynthesis

Bioinformatic analysis not only gives the expected minimal PKS encoded by txnA1 (KS), txnA2 (CLF), and txnA3 (acyl carrier protein, ACP), but also reveals a malonyl-CoA:ACP transacylase (MAT, txnA4) and a KS-III (txnA5), which are less frequently involved in the type-II PKS machinery.13,15 The inactivation of txnA4 significantly reduced the production of TXN-A with 20–30% to that of WT (Fig. 4A-VIV). This phenomenon is reasonable, for the partially functional complementation by the MAT of fatty acid biosynthesis. Deep analysis of CLF (TxnA2) revealed the gatekeeper residues as G113-L117-W195-V110-G196-M151-F134, which shows specificity towards the C-23 polyketide length.16,17 Additionally, two genes (txnC2 and txnC4) encode enzymes bearing a high sequence homology (60–75% identity) with typical ketoreductases (KRs), while TxnC2 is closer to the C-9 KRs, which are involved in the folding and cyclization of the nascent polyketide chain.18,19 TxnC1 is relatively close to the aromatase likely responsible for the C7–C12 cyclization of the first ring, followed the ketoreduction of C-9 by TxnC2, and TxnC3 shares a high sequence similarity with the 2,3-cyclase, which catalyzes the second and third cyclization steps to form the aromatic ring intermediate 7 (Fig. 3B). To verify the hypothetical functions of the relative genes in TXN-A biosynthesis, txnC2, txnC3 and txnC4 were inactivated separately by gene replacement with the aac(3)IV apramycin-resistance gene (ESI, Fig. S2†). The resultant mutant strains S. bottropensis TG5009txnC2), TG5010 (ΔtxnC4) and TG5011 (ΔtxnC3) all abolished production of TXN-A; whereas, each of the three mutants accumulated new compounds that are different from TXNs (Fig. 4B-II to IV). Following the optimized fermentation and isolation processes (including silica gel and Sephadex LH-20 column chromatography, preparative HPLC et al.), we obtained 10 mg of 4a and 6 mg of 4b from an 8 L culture of the TG5009 strain; 11 mg of 13a and 2 mg of 13b from a 4 L broth of the TG5010 strain; as well as 40 mg of 6a from a 2 L culture of the TG5011 strain. The chemical structures of these compounds were elucidated by MS, HRMS and 1D, 2D-NMR spectra (Fig. S3–S17, S28–S32 and Tables S4, S5, S8, S11†) and are summarized in Fig. 5. These results strongly support the biological function of the respective gene and the proposed biosynthetic pathway (Fig. 3B). Firstly, the production of compounds 4a and 4b by the TG5009txnC2) mutant verified that TxnC2 reduces the C-9 keto group of the nascent polyketide chain. More importantly, this result indicated that the reduction of C-9 is necessary for the next C7–C12 cyclization and aromatization, and a similar opinion has been widely accepted in type II PKS.19,20 Whereas, the production of a small amount of 4b is unexpected but reasonable, which could be derived from the incorporation of l-valine through deamination and decarboxylation, similar to that of the avermectin “b” components biosynthesis.12,21 Secondly, the TG5011 (ΔtxnC3) mutant affording compound 6a doubly confirmed that TxnC2/C1 catalyzes the C7–C12 first-ring cyclization and aromatization, and a similar cyclized compound SEK4 had been generated by an octaketide minimal PKS, except with a different starter unit and chain length.19,22 Thirdly, the isolation of 13a and 13b from the TG5010 (ΔtxnC4) mutant suggested that this KR catalyzes another ketoreduction, such as 10 into 11 (Fig. 3B), which affords the hydroxyl group for deoxysugar attachment. Together, the two new compounds 4a and 6a further established a different five-carbon starter unit for type-II PKS in TXN biosynthesis. Given the fact that the starter unit has been proven to be an attractive point for engineering aromatic polyketide biosynthetic machinery,21,23 the discovery of the different starter unit in TXN-A biosynthesis will also substantiate the potential for similar efforts.
Fig. 5

Chemical structures of the TXN-A analogues or relative metabolites produced by the mutants.

In a typically bacterial type II PKS system, a MAT sharing with fatty acid biosynthesis loads malonyl-CoA onto the thiol group of the 4′-phosphopantheinyl arm attached to the ACP, which is subsequently decarboxylated to generate an acetate starter unit and also used as extender units catalyzed by a KS-CLF heterodimer.13,15 Meanwhile, non-acetate starter units have been increasingly observed as alternative primers and usually involve an additional KS-III.13 Based on the precursor feeding, bioinformatic analysis and genetic characterization results, we could propose that the biosynthetic pathway of the TXN-A polyketide backbone follows the action of a special type II PKS (TxnA1–A2–A3) as illustrated in Fig. 3B. The enzymes involved in the branched-chain fatty acids catabolism, a transaminase and a branched-chain 2-oxo acid dehydrogenase catalyze the deamination and decarboxylation reactions to generate 2-methylbutyryl-CoA, which might be a direct starter unit for the KS of type II PKS primed by KS-III, TxnA5. Nine units of malonyl-CoA are subsequently incorporated into the PKS biosynthetic system by MAT (TxnA4) to form the full elongated polyketide chain 4. Next, the PKS associated enzymes KR (TxnC2), aromatase (TxnC1), and cyclase (TxnC3) are required to carry out the regioselective folding and cyclization of the nascent chain to yield the aromatic polycyclic backbone 7. Subsequently, a decarboxylation and further cyclization steps should be involved to yield the intermediate 8.

Tailoring enzymes for further modifications in TXN-A scaffold biosynthesis

The extremely complex structural features of TXN-A indicated that a large amount of unusual post-PKS modification steps should be involved to construct the framework. Indeed, the txn gene cluster encodes four methyltransferases (MTs, TxnM1–M4), twelve enzymes possibly related to oxidation–reduction (TxnO1–O12), two hydrolases (TxnH1–H2), and nine proteins with unknown functions (TxnP1–P4, TxnU1–U5). Except for the MTs, most of the tailoring enzymes could not be easily assigned physiological roles in the biosynthetic pathway. In total, four cytochrome P450 enzymes (P450s) encoded by txnO2, O5, O6 and O12 attracted our attention because this family of oxidative hemoproteins could catalyze many different reactions for structural diversification in natural product biosynthesis.24 Therefore, we constructed the respective gene replacement mutants S. bottropensis TG5012 (ΔtxnO2), TG5013 (ΔtxnO5), TG5014 (ΔtxnO6) and TG5015 (ΔtxnO12), and analyzed the metabolites produced by HPLC and LC-MS. The results showed that each of the four mutants afforded compounds different from the wild type (Fig. 4B-V to VIII). Although attempts to isolate new compounds from the TG5014 (ΔtxnO6) mutant were unsuccessful for the low yield and instability, we finally obtained 40 mg of 14a from a 1 L culture of the TG5012 strain, 15 mg of 9a from a 4 L fermentation broth of the TG5013 mutant, as well as 20 mg of 15a and 4 mg of 15b from a 2 L culture of the TG5015 strain. Evaluation of the MS and NMR spectra and comparison with TXN-A (Fig. S18–S21, S33–S44 and Tables S6, S9–S11†) led to the successful assignment of the chemical structures of all these new compounds (Fig. 5). Structurally, compound 9a is close to parimycin (9, Fig. 5), which was isolated from another TXN-A producing strain, marine Streptomyces sp. B8652, as a novel 2,3-dihydro-1,4-anthraquinone unrelated to TXNs.25 The isolation of 9a from a ΔtxnO5 mutant not only hinted that this P450 plays a key role in the formation of the highly oxygenated polycyclic skeleton, but also suggested that 9 or 9a should be the intermediate for the bio-generation of TXN-A (Fig. 3B). We believe that TxnO5 (P450), or/and TxnO6 (P450), TxnO4 (ferredoxin), TxnO3 (ferredoxin reductase), TxnH2 (epoxide hydrolase), and TxnM3 or M4 (MT) should be involved in the transformation of 10 from 9 (Fig. 3B and S45†), while this complex process may need more uncharacterized enzymes. In addition, the production of 14a by the ΔtxnO2 mutant and 15a/15b by the ΔtxnO12 mutant showed that the P450s catalyze hydroxylation at the C-16 and C-2 positions, respectively.

Deoxysugars pathway in TXN-A biosynthesis

Glycosylation modifications of natural products are usually important diversification steps leading to the corresponding ultimately bioactive compounds.26 TXN-A contains two deoxysugar moieties, including a rare γ-branched octose with a two-carbon side chain attached at C-4′′ position. A total of thirteen genes (txnB1–txnB12 and txnM1) in the txn gene cluster encoding enzymes are consistent with the biosynthesis of two sugar moieties and subsequently attachment to the aglycon (Fig. 3C and B). A thymine diphosphate (dTDP)-glucose synthetase (TxnB2), a dTDP-glucose 4,6-dehydratase (TxnB1) and a dNDP-hexose 2,3-dehydratase (TxnB7) catalyze the generation of 16 from glucose-1-phosphate, which possibly served as the branch point for the biosynthesis of deoxysugar donors 19 and 22 (Fig. 3C). Sequentially acted on by a 4-ketoreductase (TxnB5), a dTDP-hexose 3-C-MT (TxnM1), and an O-acyltransferase (TxnB11), the intermediate 16 could be converted into 22, a deoxysugar donor for the formation of TXN-A (Fig. 3C). On the other hand, a 3-ketoreductase (TxnB8) and a 3,5-epimerase (TxnB6) would perform the generation of 18 from 16, which could be further attached with a two-carbon side chain derived from pyruvate catalyzed by a two-component pyruvate dehydrogenase like enzyme (TxnB3/B4) to yield another deoxysugar donor 19 (Fig. 3C). A similar process was also proposed for the same deoxysugar moiety in the biosyntheses of kosinostatin,14 yersiniose A,27 and avilamycin A.28 Finally, two deoxysuger donors 19 and 22 would be installed onto the TXN scaffold catalyzed by glycosyl transferases (TxnB9, TxnB10 or TxnB12) to afford the final product TXN-A. To obtain further insight into the deoxysugars pathway, especially the usual γ-branched octose, we inactivated the txnB4 gene, resulting in the mutant strain S. bottropensis TG5016 (ΔtxnB4). This mutation completely abolished TXN-A production, but yielded two new compounds (Fig. 4B-VIV). After fermentation and purification, we isolated 10 mg of 12a and 3 mg of 12b from a 1 L culture, and the structures are shown in Fig. 5 (Fig. S22–S27 and Tables S7, S11†). Compared with TXN-A, the major compound 12a has lost the γ-branched octose moiety at 13-OH, which means that the respective glycosyl transferase bears a relatively strict substrate specificity toward the two-carbon side chain. The production of the minor compound 12b revealed that a sugar C-MT, most likely TxnM1, catalyzes a methylation reaction to form a new sugar donor 23, which partially completed 19 to generate 12b, though it is not the perfect sugar donor for the glycosyl transferase comparable to the native 19 (Fig. 3C and B).

Bioactivity of TXN analogues and primary structure–activity relationship

With seven TXN-A analogues in hand, we subsequently performed in vitro cytotoxicity assays of these compounds using cultured Jurkat cells. As a positive control, TXN-A shows high activity, with an IC50 value of 0.78 ± 0.08 nM; and the IC50 values of these analogues were also measured and are listed below the respective structure in Fig. 5. The most potent compound 14a, exhibits excellent activity, having an IC50 value of 0.85 ± 0.05 nM, which is comparable to that of TXN-A. Another promising compound 15a (IC50 = 5.20 ± 0.65 nM), which was also chemically synthesized by Myers's group,9 suggested that the 2-OH group is changeable for further drug development. In addition, the cytotoxicity of TXN-A is higher than that of 12a or 13a, and that 15a is more active than 15b revealed that either of two deoxysugar moieties is important for the anti-cancer activity. Another interesting conclusion could be drawn; that the two-carbon side chain of the γ-branched octose is important for the biological activity of TXN-A, because 12b is more than 10-fold less potent. Furthermore, the keto group at C-7′′ of this octose side chain could also contribute to the anti-cancer activity, which was supported by the observation of the reduced potency of 13b compared to 13a.

Conclusions

Currently, the bacterial aromatic polyketides generated by type II PKSs have been well studied.13,15,29,30 However, the unusual structure of TXN-A distinguishes it from others and indicated that a unique biosynthetic machinery, including a series of sophisticated modifications should be involved in the pathway. Our feeding experiments and genetic characterization of the txn gene cluster have now revealed a novel precursor pathway for type II PKS. In addition, the TXN biosynthesis system employs extremely complex tailoring modifications, which suggested a vast array of enzymatic reactions to be explored. These findings have expanded our understanding of type II PKSs and set the stage for further combinatorial biosynthesis to yield more analogues towards drug discovery. Click here for additional data file.
  26 in total

Review 1.  Type II polyketide synthases: gaining a deeper insight into enzymatic teamwork.

Authors:  Christian Hertweck; Andriy Luzhetskyy; Yuri Rebets; Andreas Bechthold
Journal:  Nat Prod Rep       Date:  2006-11-22       Impact factor: 13.423

2.  Ectopic expression of the minimal whiE polyketide synthase generates a library of aromatic polyketides of diverse sizes and shapes.

Authors:  Y Shen; P Yoon; T W Yu; H G Floss; D Hopwood; B S Moore
Journal:  Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A       Date:  1999-03-30       Impact factor: 11.205

3.  Trioxacarcins, novel antitumor antibiotics. I. Producing organism, fermentation and biological activities.

Authors:  F Tomita; T Tamaoki; M Morimoto; K Fujimoto
Journal:  J Antibiot (Tokyo)       Date:  1981-12       Impact factor: 2.649

Review 4.  Diversity of P450 enzymes in the biosynthesis of natural products.

Authors:  Larissa M Podust; David H Sherman
Journal:  Nat Prod Rep       Date:  2012-07-23       Impact factor: 13.423

5.  Unconventional origin and hybrid system for construction of pyrrolopyrrole moiety in kosinostatin biosynthesis.

Authors:  Hong-Min Ma; Qiang Zhou; Yu-Min Tang; Zhuan Zhang; Yong-Sheng Chen; Hai-Yan He; Hai-Xue Pan; Man-Cheng Tang; Ju-Fang Gao; Sheng-Yin Zhao; Yasuhiro Igarashi; Gong-Li Tang
Journal:  Chem Biol       Date:  2013-06-20

6.  A multiply convergent platform for the synthesis of trioxacarcins.

Authors:  Jakub Švenda; Nicholas Hill; Andrew G Myers
Journal:  Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A       Date:  2011-01-18       Impact factor: 11.205

Review 7.  Biosynthesis of aromatic polyketides in bacteria.

Authors:  Abhirup Das; Chaitan Khosla
Journal:  Acc Chem Res       Date:  2009-05-19       Impact factor: 22.384

8.  Polyketide chain length control by chain length factor.

Authors:  Yi Tang; Shiou-Chuan Tsai; Chaitan Khosla
Journal:  J Am Chem Soc       Date:  2003-10-22       Impact factor: 15.419

9.  Biosynthesis of pentangular polyphenols: deductions from the benastatin and griseorhodin pathways.

Authors:  Gerald Lackner; Angéla Schenk; Zhongli Xu; Kathrin Reinhardt; Zeynep S Yunt; Jörn Piel; Christian Hertweck
Journal:  J Am Chem Soc       Date:  2007-07-11       Impact factor: 15.419

10.  Formation of gutingimycin: analytical investigation of trioxacarcin A-mediated alkylation of dsDNA.

Authors:  Ansgar Fitzner; Holm Frauendorf; Hartmut Laatsch; Ulf Diederichsen
Journal:  Anal Bioanal Chem       Date:  2008-01-22       Impact factor: 4.142

View more
  8 in total

1.  Resistance-Guided Mining of Bacterial Genotoxins Defines a Family of DNA Glycosylases.

Authors:  Noah P Bradley; Katherine L Wahl; Jacob L Steenwyk; Antonis Rokas; Brandt F Eichman
Journal:  mBio       Date:  2022-03-21       Impact factor: 7.786

Review 2.  Recent highlights in biosynthesis research using stable isotopes.

Authors:  Jan Rinkel; Jeroen S Dickschat
Journal:  Beilstein J Org Chem       Date:  2015-12-09       Impact factor: 2.883

Review 3.  New insights into bacterial type II polyketide biosynthesis.

Authors:  Zhuan Zhang; Hai-Xue Pan; Gong-Li Tang
Journal:  F1000Res       Date:  2017-02-21

4.  Biosynthesis of Rishirilide B.

Authors:  Philipp Schwarzer; Julia Wunsch-Palasis; Andreas Bechthold; Thomas Paululat
Journal:  Antibiotics (Basel)       Date:  2018-03-07

Review 5.  Biosynthesis of aromatic polyketides in microorganisms using type II polyketide synthases.

Authors:  Jia Wang; Ruihua Zhang; Xin Chen; Xinxiao Sun; Yajun Yan; Xiaolin Shen; Qipeng Yuan
Journal:  Microb Cell Fact       Date:  2020-05-24       Impact factor: 5.328

6.  Base excision repair system targeting DNA adducts of trioxacarcin/LL-D49194 antibiotics for self-resistance.

Authors:  Xiaorong Chen; Noah P Bradley; Wei Lu; Katherine L Wahl; Mei Zhang; Hua Yuan; Xian-Feng Hou; Brandt F Eichman; Gong-Li Tang
Journal:  Nucleic Acids Res       Date:  2022-03-21       Impact factor: 16.971

Review 7.  Biosynthesis of DNA-Alkylating Antitumor Natural Products.

Authors:  Qiu-Yue Nie; Yu Hu; Xian-Feng Hou; Gong-Li Tang
Journal:  Molecules       Date:  2022-09-27       Impact factor: 4.927

8.  Metabolomics Tools Assisting Classic Screening Methods in Discovering New Antibiotics from Mangrove Actinomycetia in Leizhou Peninsula.

Authors:  Qin-Pei Lu; Yong-Mei Huang; Shao-Wei Liu; Gang Wu; Qin Yang; Li-Fang Liu; Hai-Tao Zhang; Yi Qi; Ting Wang; Zhong-Ke Jiang; Jun-Jie Li; Hao Cai; Xiu-Jun Liu; Hui Luo; Cheng-Hang Sun
Journal:  Mar Drugs       Date:  2021-12-01       Impact factor: 5.118

  8 in total

北京卡尤迪生物科技股份有限公司 © 2022-2023.