| Literature DB >> 30266955 |
Joana Martins1,2, Niina Leikoski3, Matti Wahlsten3, Joana Azevedo1,2, Jorge Antunes1,2, Jouni Jokela3, Kaarina Sivonen3, Vitor Vasconcelos1,2, David P Fewer4, Pedro N Leão5.
Abstract
Cyanobactins are a family of linear and cyclic peptides produced through the post-translational modification of short precursor peptides. A mass spectrometry-based screening of potential cyanobactin producers led to the discovery of a new prenylated member of this family of compounds, sphaerocyclamide (1), from Sphaerospermopsis sp. LEGE 00249. The sphaerocyclamide biosynthetic gene cluster (sph) encoding the novel macrocyclic prenylated cyanobactin, was sequenced. Heterologous expression of the sph gene cluster in Escherichia coli confirmed the connection between genomic and mass spectrometric data. Unambiguous establishment of the orientation and site of prenylation required the full structural elucidation of 1 using Nuclear Magnetic Resonance (NMR), which demonstrated that a forward prenylation occurred on the tyrosine residue. Compound 1 was tested in pharmacologically or ecologically relevant biological assays and revealed moderate antimicrobial activity towards the fouling bacterium Halomonas aquamarina CECT 5000.Entities:
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Year: 2018 PMID: 30266955 PMCID: PMC6162287 DOI: 10.1038/s41598-018-32618-5
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379
Figure 1Structure of sphaerocyclamide (1).
Annotation of the sph gene cluster from Sphaerospermopsis sp. LEGE 00249.
| Blastp resultsa | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Protein | Predicted function | Description | Identity/similarity (aa %) | Organism | Accession number |
| SphC | Unknown | Cyanobactin biosynthesis system PatC/TenC/TruC family protein | 94/94 | WP_006198022 | |
| SphB | Unknown | Cyanobactin biosynthesis system PatB/AcyB/McaB family protein | 97/98 | WP_0066198021 | |
| SphA | N-terminal protease | PatA/PatG family cyanobactin maturation protease | 93/95 | WP_063871509 | |
| SphE | Precursor peptide | Anacyclamide/piricyclamide family prenylated cyclic peptide | 81/95 | WP_063871506 | |
| ORF5 | Putative transposase | Transposase | 92/93 | WP_039204680 | |
| SphF | Prenyltransferase | LynF/TruF/PatF family peptide O-prenyltransferase | 98/98 | WP_028090374 | |
| ORF6 | Putative endonuclease | Uma2 family endonuclease | 97/98 | WP_104387878 | |
| ORF7 | Hypothetical protein | Hypothetical protein | 98/98 | WP_028090379 | |
| ORF8 | XisI protein | XisI protein | 99/99 | WP_006196086 | |
| SphG | C-terminal protease | PatA/PatG family cyanobactin maturation protease | 95/97 | WP_015081385 | |
aProtein-protein Blast against the Refseq database, accessed May 2018.
Figure 2Biosynthesis of 1 in Sphaerospermopsis sp. LEGE 00249. (A) The sphaerocyclamide (sph) biosynthetic gene cluster is organized in a bidirectional operon. Genes marked in green encode conserved and hypothetical proteins that have no recognized or predicted function; the SphE precursor peptide is marked in dark blue. The genes encoding cyanobactin proteases are marked in light blue. The prenyltransferase gene is marked in light grey and genes commonly found in cyanobactin gene clusters but without predicted function are shown in dark grey. A transposase is present between sphE and sphF genes. Cyanobactin precursor peptides encode hypervariable amino acid core sequences. The precursor peptide core that originates 1 is shown below the sphE gene. (B) Comparison of the extracted ion chromatograms ([M + H]+, 1) of methanol extracts of Sphaerospermopsis sp. LEGE 00249 (bottom), E. coli (pC6_00249) (top) and E. coli (pC1_00249) (middle, negative control) and comparison of MS2 data from m/z 919 ions (corresponding to 1, [M + H]+) obtained from the Sphaerospermopsis sp. LEGE 00249 extract (bottom) and from E. coli (pC6_00249) (top).
Figure 3NMR-based structure analysis of 1. (A) Selected HMBC and COSY correlations establishing the structures of the amino acids and prenyl group of 1; (B) NOE-derived inter-residue connectivity and attachment of the prenyl group to the Tyr moiety.