| Literature DB >> 31388353 |
Fuchao Xu1, Russell Butler2, Kyle May2, Megi Rexhepaj2, Dayu Yu1,3, Jiachen Zi1, Yi Chen1, Yonghong Liang1,4, Jia Zeng1, Joan Hevel2, Jixun Zhan1.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Creating designer molecules using a combination of select domains from polyketide synthases and/or nonribosomal peptide synthetases (NRPS) continues to be a synthetic goal. However, an incomplete understanding of how protein-protein interactions and dynamics affect each of the domain functions stands as a major obstacle in the field. Of particular interest is understanding the basis for a class of methyltransferase domains (MT) that are found embedded within the adenylation domain (A) of fungal NRPS systems instead of in an end-to-end architecture.Entities:
Keywords: Domain removal; Heterologous expression; In vitro reaction; Methyltransferase domain; Nonribosomal peptide synthetase; Substrate specificity
Year: 2019 PMID: 31388353 PMCID: PMC6670151 DOI: 10.1186/s13036-019-0195-y
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Biol Eng ISSN: 1754-1611 Impact factor: 4.355
Fig. 1Domain organization of BSLS and BEAS and their corresponding products. a Domain architecture of BSLS. b Biosynthesis of bassianolide and beauvericins by BSLS and/or BEAS
Fig. 2Biosynthesis of N-desmethylbassianolide (a) by BSLS-ΔMT (MT removed) and N-desmethylbeauvericins (b) by BEAS-G2131A (MT inactivated)
Fig. 3In vitro reactions of MTBSLS with aminoacyl-SNACs. a Methylation of L-Leu-SNAC and L-Phe-SNAC by MTBSLS in the presence of AdoMet. (i) L-Leu-SNAC + MTBSLS; (ii) L-Phe-SNAC + MTBSLS. b ESI-MS (+) spectrum of N-methyl-L-Leu-SNAC. c ESI-MS (+) spectrum of N-methyl-L-Phe-SNAC
Fig. 4In vitro methylation activity and substrate specificity of MTBSLS. a Methylation was tracked using a 3H-labeled methyl group (highlighted in blue) from the co-substrate AdoMet. “R” represents amino acid side chain. b Concentration-dependent methylation rate of L-Phe-SNAC (blue trace) and L-Leu-SNAC (orange trace) by isolated MTBSLS
Fig. 5Substrate specificity of MTBSLS constructs. a Various MTBSLS constructs that were evaluated. b Comparison of the preference of different MTBSLS constructs to L-Phe-SNAC and L-Leu-SNAC. The ratio of methylated products formed from 5 mM L-Phe-SNAC or 5 mM L-Leu-SNAC over a 10-min reaction time are plotted. The data for cMT and XLcMT represent two separate preparations of crosslinked protein, assayed in duplicate
Fig. 6Comparison of the MT domains of TioS and modeled BSLS. a A homology model for MTBSLS generated with the Swiss-Model server using the MT-A structure from TioS(A4aM4A4b) (pdb ID 5wmm). Sequence identity between the core of MT4TioS and MTBSLS is 32%. For context purposes, the A domain of TioS is shown in light gray. The generated model of MTBSLS is shown in blue. The active site was identified by aligning the TioS structure (which contained S-adenosylhomocysteine, shown in green) with the MTBSLS model. The N- and C-termini of MTBSLS are shown in orange and magenta spheres, respectively. b The active site residues of the MT domain in TioS(A4aM4A4b) (pdb ID 5wmm) that are proposed to interact with the valine side chain (magenta) of the enzyme-bound substrate (G525, W526, M540, W543, S632, Q635, D664, R666, and L738, shown in blue). The N-methylated product of the reaction (methyl group in green) was modeled into the active site [4]. c Residues in TioS(A4aM4A4b) that interact with the substrate amino acid are conserved (yellow) in MTBSLS
Fig. 7Crosslinking of cMTBSLS. Pre-reduced and desalted proteins (20 μM cMTBSLS or MTBSLS as a control) were incubated with 20 μM bis-maleimidoethane or buffer. Free thiol content in the proteins was assessed by quenching samples with 5-fluorosceinyl-maleimide (5F) prior to SDS-PAGE. Gels were imaged for fluorescence and then stained with Coomassie and imaged for total protein. The bands labeled with an asterisk represent crosslinked cMT (XLcMT)
Primers used in this study
| Primer | Sequence | Restriction sites |
|---|---|---|
| BEAS-S2131A-F | 5′-CCTGGAGATTGGAACCGCTACAGGTATGATCTTGTT-3′ | None |
| BEAS-S2131A-R | 5′-ACATGCCCCGGTACATGACCGTCGCGTAGAGTAT-3′ | None |
| BSLS-Bsu36I5518-F | 5′-AACCTCAGGATGCTGTCGATGCG-3′ | Bsu36I |
| BSLS-without-MT-R | 5′-CACCGCCACACGTCGCTTTTCCGCAACCACAAATCCG-3′ | None |
| BSLS-without-MT-F | 5′-CGGATTTGTGGTTGCGGAAAAGCGACGTGTGGCGGTG-3′ | None |
| 2nd-BSLS-B-R-PmlI | 5′-AACACGTGTAAAGACGCATTCAAAGCCT-3′ | PmlI |
| MTBSLS-F-NheI | 5′-AAGCTAGCCACGACGACACTGCCGAACA-3′ | NheI |
| MTBSLS-R-EcoRI | 5′-AAGAATTCTCACTGAAGTCGCTGGAGAGGTT-3′ | EcoRI |
| MTBSLS-F-NdeI | 5′-AACATATGCACGACGACACTGCCGAACA-3′ | NdeI |
| MTBSLS-R-PmeI | 5′-AAGTTTAAACTCACTGAAGTCGCTGGAGAGGTT-3′ | PmeI |
| MTBEAS-F-NdeI | 5′-AACATATGGCTGACGATGCCGTTGAGCA-3′ | NdeI |
| MTBEAS-R-PmeI | 5′-AAGTTTAAACCTGCAGCCGCTGCAGCGGCC-3′ | PmeI |
| aMTBSLS-F-SpeI | 5′-AAACTAGTCAATTCAAGATTCGAAGTAACCGCATC-3′ | SpeI |
| aMTBSLS-R-EcoRI | 5′-AAAGAATTCTCACGCCACAATGTGGGAAG-3′ | EcoRI |
| cMTBSLS-F-NheI | 5′- AAAGCTAGCTGCGTTGCGGAACACG-3′ | NheI |
| cMTBSLS-R-EcoRI | 5′-TTTGAATTCTCAGCACTGGAGAGGTTGATTGGTGAG-3′ | EcoRI |
Plasmids used in this study
| Plasmid | Description | Restriction sites | Source |
|---|---|---|---|
| pDY37 | NheI and PmlI | [ | |
| pDY42 | NdeI and PmlI | [ | |
| pDY170 | NheI and PmlI | This work | |
| pDY254 | Bsu36I and PmlI | This work | |
| pDY265 | Bsu36I and PmlI | This work | |
| pDY267 | MTBEAS in pJET1.2 | NdeI and PmeI | This work |
| pDY268 | MTBEAS in YEpADH2p-TRP1 | NdeI and PmeI | This work |
| pFC30 | MTBSLS in pJET1.2 | NdeI and PmeI | This work |
| pFC31 | MTBSLS in YEpADH2p-TRP1 | NdeI and PmeI | This work |
| pZJ135 | MTBSLS in pJET1.2 | NheI and EcoRI | This work |
| pJCZ22 | MTBSLS in pET28a | NheI and EcoRI | This work |
| paMTBSLS | aMTBSLS in pET28a (a small portion of the A2 domain+MT of BSLS) | NheI and EcoRI | This work |
| pcMTBSLS | cMTBSLS in pET28a (MT of BSLS containing an additional cysteine residue at both the N- and C-termini of the MT domain) | NheI and EcoRI | This work |