| Literature DB >> 9521734 |
R Sinha Roy1, P J Belshaw, C T Walsh.
Abstract
Microcin B17 (MccB17) is a peptidyl antibiotic that is secreted in stationary phase by several strains of Escherichia coli. The antibiotic efficacy of this polypeptide depends on the posttranslational modification of eight cysteine and serine residues to thiazoles and oxazoles, respectively, within the 69 aa McbA structural gene product. Mono- and bisheterocycle formation is mediated by MccB17 synthetase, an enzyme complex composed of three proteins: McbB, -C, and -D. After substrate processing, an N-terminal 26 aa propeptide sequence is cleaved to afford the mature antibiotic. A method for the overexpression and rapid purification of microcin synthetase has been developed using a calmodulin-binding peptide tag. The determinants of substrate recognition and synthetase-mediated heterocycle formation were investigated by a systematic evaluation of 15 McbA1-46 analogues representing minimal substrates containing the first bisheterocyclization site (Gly39-Ser40-Cys41-Gly42) and variants thereof. Each substrate analogue was overexpressed and affinity-purified as fusions to maltose-binding protein, incubated with purified synthetase, and evaluated for processing by Western blots, UV spectroscopy, and mass spectrometry. Insights gained into the process of enzymatic heterocycle formation from cysteine and serine residues are discussed, including the distance dependence of the first cyclized residue from the propeptide and the local sequence context at the cyclizable sites. A model for McbA substrate recognition and processing by MccB17 synthetase is proposed.Entities:
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Year: 1998 PMID: 9521734 DOI: 10.1021/bi9728250
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Biochemistry ISSN: 0006-2960 Impact factor: 3.162