| Literature DB >> 32281262 |
Jesse W Cain1, Kristin I Miller1, John A Kalaitzis1, Rocky Chau1, Brett A Neilan1,2.
Abstract
Genome mining of Ascomycete sp. F53 (F53), a fungal endophyte of the traditional Chinese medicinal plant Taxus yunnanensis (Chinese yew), revealed 35 putative specialized metabolite biosynthesis gene clusters, one of which encodes a rarely seen tandem polyketide synthase pathway with close homology to azaphilone biosynthesis pathways. A novel compound, lijiquinone 1, was subsequently isolated from F53 and structurally and functionally characterized. The m/z 385 [M + H+ ]+ compound, comprised of a cyclohexenone side group attached to a core bicyclic ring, displayed cytotoxicity against human myeloma cells (IC50 = 129 μM), as well as antifungal activity against Candida albicans (IC50 = 79 μM) and Cryptococcus albidus (IC50 = 141 μM). Our results suggest that enzymes encoded on the lij gene cluster are responsible for the synthesis of 1 and that the medicinal properties of T. yunnanensis could be partially mediated by this novel azaphilone. This study highlights the utility of combining traditional knowledge with contemporary genomic approaches for the discovery of new bioactive compounds.Entities:
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Year: 2020 PMID: 32281262 PMCID: PMC7415360 DOI: 10.1111/1751-7915.13568
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Microb Biotechnol ISSN: 1751-7915 Impact factor: 5.813
Fig. 1The novel azaphilone 1 and structurally related polyketides 2‐7.
Fig. 2Combined ITS and LSU phylogram of F53 within the order Muyocopronales. F53 is bolded and coloured red. Pleosporales spp. were used as the outgroup. Evolutionary relationships were determined by Bayesian inference (BI) analysis using a GTR + G substitution model. Branch length indicates inferred divergence of nucleotide sequences. Node labels indicate BI posterior probabilities (percentage) where values >50% were considered significant.
Fig. 3Phylogeneny of F53 KS domains in relation to those that produce azaphilones. KS domains from F53 derived PKSs are in bold with LijA and LijE coloured red. Evolutionary relationships were determined by Bayesian inference (BI) analysis using a LG + I+G substitution model. Branch length indicates inferred divergence of amino acid sequences. Node labels indicate BI posterior probability (percentage) where values >50% were considered significant.
Fig. 4Organization of the proposed 1 biosynthesis gene cluster (lij). The putative functions of the depicted lij genes: lijA (reducing PKS); lijB (ketoreductase); lijC (dehydrogenase); lijD (hydroxylase); lijE (non‐reducing PKS); lijF (oxidase); lijG (aldehyde dehydrogenase); lijH (acyltransferase). Catalytic domains identified from PKS protein sequences: LijA (KS‐AT‐DH‐cMT‐ER‐KR‐ACP); LijE (SAT‐KS‐AT‐PT‐ACP‐cMT‐R). Key: KS (ketosynthase), AT (acyl transferase), DH (dehydratase), MT (methyl transferase), ER (enoyl reductase), KR (ketoreductase), ACP (acyl carrier protein), SAT (starter unit:ACP transacylase), PT (product template) and R (reductive domain).
Putative functions of lij cluster biosynthetic gene products.
| Protein | Amino Acids | Putative function | BLASTP match | Accession No. | Ident. (%) | Cover. (%) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| LijA | 2223 | Reducing PKS (KS‐AT‐DH‐cMT‐ER‐KR‐ACP) | Type I iterative polyketide synthase, | OBT39594.1 | 73 | 100 |
| LijB | 284 | Hydrolase | Citrinin biosynthesis oxydoreductase CtnB, | PVH94008.1 | 64 | 94 |
| LijC | 282 | Dehydrogenase | Putative short‐chain dehydrogenase/reductase, | XP_007816049.1 | 84 | 98 |
| LijD | 457 | Hydroxylase | Putative salicylate hydroxylase, | XP_0078116050.1 | 70 | 96 |
| LijE | 2685 | Non‐reducing PKS (SAT‐KS‐AT‐PT‐ACP‐cMT‐R) | Type I iterative polyketide synthase, | OBT39041.1 | 81 | 99 |
| LijF | 600 | Oxidase | Oxidase cueO precursor, | KEQ59244.1 | 59 | 92 |
| LijG | 483 | Aldehyde dehydrogenase | Aldehyde dehydrogenase, | XP_007583778.1 | 53 | 98 |
| LijH | 321 | Acyl transferase | Carbohydrate esterase, | OCL03758.1 | 58 | 98 |
NMR data of 1 recorded in CDCl3.
| Position | δC | δH (mult., | COSY | HMBC (2
|
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | 154.3 | 7.91 (s) | – | C‐3, C‐4a, C‐8,C‐8a |
| 3 | 158.0 | – | – | – |
| 4 | 113.6 | 6.25 (brs) | – | C‐3, C‐4a, C‐5, C‐8a, C‐10 |
| 4a | 143.0 | – | – | – |
| 5 | 107.2 | 5.65 (d, 1.0) | – | C‐4, C7, C‐8a |
| 6 | 194.3 | – | – | – |
| 7 | 83.9 | – | – | – |
| 8 | 193.0 | – | – | – |
| 8a | 115.3 | – | – | – |
| 9 | 22.0 | 1.59 (s) | – | C‐6, C‐7, C‐8 |
| 10 | 59.6 | 3.09 (d, 12.5) | H‐11 | C‐3, C‐4, C‐11, C‐15, C‐16 |
| 11 | 32.8 | 2.60 (m) | H‐10, H‐12b, H‐16 | C‐10, C‐13 |
| 12 | 34.0 |
2.63 (brt, 5.3) 2.25 (ddt, 18.8,10.6, 2.6) |
H‐13 H‐11 |
C‐10, C‐11, C‐13, C‐14 C‐11, C‐13, C‐14, C‐16 |
| 13 | 150.7 | 7.10 (ddd, 10.0, 6.0, 2.1) | H‐12a, H‐12b, H‐14 | C‐11, C‐15 |
| 14 | 129.0 | 6.16 (dd, 10.1, 2.4) | H‐12a, H‐12b, H‐13 | C‐10, C‐12 |
| 15 | 194.7 | – | – | – |
| 16 | 19.8 | 1.08 (d, 6.5) | H‐11 | C‐10, C‐11, C‐12 |
| 1′ | 176.4 | – | – | – |
| 2′ | 39.9 | 2.54 (m) | H‐3a′, H‐5′ | C‐1′, C‐3′, C‐4′, C‐5′ |
| 3′ | 26.6 |
1.75 (dt, 13.7, 7.4) 1.51 (m) |
H‐2′, H‐3b′H‐4′ H‐2′, H‐3a′, H‐4′ |
C‐1′, C‐2′, C‐4′, C‐5′ C‐1′, C‐2′, C‐4′, C‐5′ |
| 4′ | 11.3 | 0.97 (t, 13.7) | H‐3a′,H‐3b′ | C‐2′, C‐3′ |
| 5′ | 16.3 | 1.20 (d, 7.4) | H‐2′ | C‐1′, C‐2′, C‐3′ |
Fig. 5Proposed biosynthesis of 1 and hypothetical intermediates 6‐8.