| Literature DB >> 31195965 |
J Dreyer1, M Rautenbach2, E Booysen1, A D van Staden1, S M Deane1, L M T Dicks3.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Xenorhabdus spp. live in close symbiosis with nematodes of the Steinernema genus. Steinernema nematodes infect an insect larva and release their symbionts into the haemocoel of the insect. Once released into the haemocoel, the bacteria produce bioactive compounds to create a semi-exclusive environment by inhibiting the growth of bacteria, yeasts and molds. The antimicrobial compounds thus far identified are xenocoumacins, xenortides, xenorhabdins, indole derivatives, xenoamicins, bicornutin and a number of antimicrobial peptides. The latter may be linear peptides such as the bacteriocins xenocin and xenorhabdicin, rhabdopeptides and cabanillasin, or cyclic, such as PAX lipopeptides, taxlllaids, xenobactin and szentiamide. Thus far, production of antimicrobial compounds have been reported for Xenorhabdus nematophila, Xenorhabdus budapestensis, Xenorhabdus cabanillasii, Xenorhabdus kozodoii, Xenorhabdus szentirmaii, Xenorhabdus doucetiae, Xenorhabdus mauleonii, Xenorhabdus indica and Xenorhabdus bovienii. Here we describe, for the first time, PAX lipopeptides and xenocoumacin 2 produced by Xenorhabdus khoisanae. These compounds were identified using ultraperformance liquid chromatography, linked to high resolution electrospray ionisation mass spectrometry and tandem mass spectrometry.Entities:
Keywords: Antimicrobial complex; Lys-rich PAX lipopeptides; Mass spectrometric analysis; Xenocoumacin; Xenorhabdus khoisanae
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31195965 PMCID: PMC6567599 DOI: 10.1186/s12866-019-1503-x
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Microbiol ISSN: 1471-2180 Impact factor: 3.605
Fig. 1AntiSMASH results presenting the similarity between the genome of X. khoisanae SB10 and biosynthetic gene clusters of Thiomarinol (A), Zeamine (B), Xenocoumacin (C), Lysobactin (D), APE Ec (E), Xenoamicin (F), Safracin (G), Taxlllaid (H) and Acinetobactin (I)
Identification of the four modules coding for the PAX synthetase complex in the genome of X. khoisanae SB10
| Gene | Protein product | Synthetase Protein | Presumed function | Position on Chromosome | Identity (%) | Positivity (%) | Origin | Accession number |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| PaxT | XpsD | ABC-transporter | Node 4–50,691 to 52,328 | 76 (416/549) | 88 (487/549) | CBJ81280.1 | |
|
| PaxA | XpsA | NRPS | Node 4–52,788 to 56,036 | 62 (678/1098) | 76 (836/1098) | CBJ81279.1 | |
|
| PaxB | XpsB | NRPS | Node 4–66,118 to 76,893 | 63 (2265/3614) | 76 (2747/3614) | CBJ81277.1 | |
|
| PaxC | XpsB | NRPS | Node 4–56,079 to 66,107 | 69 (2307/3356) | 81 (2733/3356) | CBJ81278.1 |
Summary of the antimicrobial compounds in the three main absorbing fractions that were identified using UPLC-MS and UPLC-MSe. PAX peptide identities and names are from Fuchs et al. [32]
| Fraction | UPLC Rt (min) | Compound | Theoretical | Mass error (ppm)c | Proposed compound identity | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| B | 4.27 | 407.2182 | 406.2104 | 406.2104 | 0.0 | Xenocoumacin 2 (C21H30N2O6) |
| 2.93 | 1052.7948 | 1051.7870 | 1051.7845 | 2.4 | PAX1’ (C14H27O2)GK6 | |
| C | 3.18 | 1078.8119 | 1077.8041 | 1077.8001 | 3.7 | PAX7E1* (C16H29O2)GK6 |
| 3.42 | 1070.8091 | 1069.7921 | 1069.7951 | −2.8 | PAX1L* (C14H29O3)GK6 | |
| D | 3.29 | 1066.8097 | 1065.7965 | 1065.8001 | −3.4 | PAX3’ (C15H29O2)GK6 |
| F | 3.47 | 1054.8115 | 1053.8012 | 1053.8001 | 1.0 | PAX1L-DH* (C14H29O2)GK6 |
| 3.32, 3.47# | 1080.8286 | 1079.8191 | 1079.8158 | 3.1 | PAX7 (C16H31O2)GK6 | |
| 3.71 | 1078.8096 | 1077.8002 | 1077.8001 | 0.1 | PAX7E2* (C16H29O2)GK6 | |
| 3.88 | 1078.8070 | 1077.7979 | 1077.8001 | −2.0 | PAX7E3* (C16H29O2)GK6 | |
| G | 2.51 | 1050.7723 | 1049.7623 | 1049.7688 | −6.2 | PAX5 (C14H25O2)GK6 |
| 2.90 | 1052.7936 | 1051.7821 | 1051.7845 | 2.3 | PAX1’ (C14H27O2)GK6 | |
| 3.57 | 1080.8280 | 1079.8161 | 1079.8158 | 0.3 | PAX7 (C16H31O2)GK6 | |
| 3.83 | 1106.8412 | 1105.8294 | 1105.8314 | −1.8 | PAX8 (C18H33O2)GK6 |
aExperimental monoisotopic Mr of compound was calculated using the TOF transform or MaxEnt3 function in the MassLynx 4.01 software package
bTheoretical monoisotopic Mr of compound was calculated from accurate monoisotopic Mr of Lys =128.09496 and Gly = 57.02146, and monoisotopic Ar of O =15.9949146; H=1.0078250, N=14.0030740 and C=12.0000000
cMass error in parts per million (ppm) = 106×{Mr (theoretical) - Mr (experimental)}/ Mr (theoretical)
#Early elution of broad peak, fronting and tailing due to aggregation at high concentration
*Putative identification as PAX peptides from peptide moiety fragments and accurate mass determination, E denotes an enoyl group, L denotes linear, DH denotes dehydroxylated, structure of R-group was not elucidated
Refer to Additional file 1 for UPLC-MS, ESMS and MS/MS data on all the compounds
Fig. 2Representative chromatograms depicting the isolation of antimicrobial fractions from the X. khoisanae SB10 culture extracts. a Separation of SPC active fractions on 15 RPC resin by FPLC, with a linear gradient of 10 to 55% (v/v) acetonitrile containing 0.1% (v/v) TFA. b C18 HPLC chromatography of the fraction A1 in graph A (FPLC active fraction). A linear gradient from 25 to 45% acetonitrile containing 0.1% TFA was used. The peak fractions denoted A-G in graph B displayed antimicrobial activity
Fig. 3Antimicrobial activity of the factions collected (fractions B, C, D, F and G) and the combined activity of purified xenocoumacin 2 (m/z 407) and PAX1’1 (m/z 1052) from the compound library of the Department of Microbiology. Growth inhibition is observed as zones surrounding the wells. Activity BD170 = Bacillus subtilis subsp. subtilis, Xen 14 = Escherichia coli and CAB 392 = Candida albicans
Fig. 4The UPLC profiles of fraction B collected from C18-HPLC (refer to Fig. 2 b). The top chromatogram (a) shows the base peak intensity mass chromatogram of fraction B and the middle chromatogram (b) the mass extracted chromatogram for the molecular ion with m/z 407.217 at 30 ppm tolerance. The bottom chromatogram (c) shows the spectrophotometric profile at 314 nm and the insert shows the UV spectrum of the peak at 4.23 min
Fig. 5ESI-MS and CID spectra (generated via MSe type analysis) of the main component at 4.23 in fraction B, namely xenocoumacin 2. The component mass spectrum of xenocoumacin 2 (structure insert) is shown in the top spectrum (a) and fragmentation product ion spectrum is shown in the bottom spectrum (b). The two main fragments are indicated on the xenocoumacin 2 structure. Refer to the text for the discussion of the fragmentation of xenocoumacin 2
Fig. 6Representative CID spectrum over m/z 50–1050 of PAX1’ with intact molecular ion at m/z = 1052.79. CID analyses were performed over a CE gradient from 20 to 60 eV at a CV of 15 V. The two structures above the spectrum show the fragments that would lead to the 513.4 and 668.5 product ions and their subsequent fragmentation. The R group for PAX1’ is (3R)-3-hydroxy tetradecanoyl and the side-chain of Lys3 links up to the carboxyl group of Lys7 to form the ring structure
Fig. 7UPLC-MS profiles (left panel) and ESI-MS spectra (right panel) of the five major PAX lipopeptides that were detected in the antimicrobial fractions of the X. khoisanae SB10 culture extracts
Fig. 8Primary structure of five known PAX lipopeptides [32] that were detected in the antimicrobial fractions of the X. khoisanae SB10 culture extracts