Title of article :
Construction of desosamine containing polyketide libraries using a glycosyltransferase with broad substrate specificity Original Research Article
Author/Authors :
Li Tang، نويسنده , , Robert McDaniel، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
ماهنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2001
Pages :
9
From page :
547
To page :
555
Abstract :
Abstract Background: Combinatorial biosynthesis techniques using polyketide synthases (PKSs) in heterologous host organisms have enabled the production of macrolide aglycone libraries in which many positions of the macrolactone ring have been manipulated. However, the deoxysugar moieties of macrolides, absent in previous libraries, play a critical role in contributing to the antimicrobial properties exhibited by compounds such as erythromycin. Since the glycosidic components of polyketides dramatically alter their molecular binding properties, it would be useful to develop general expression hosts and vectors for synthesis and attachment of deoxysugars to expand the nature and size of such polyketide libraries. Results: A set of nine deoxysugar biosynthetic and auxiliary genes from the picromycin/methymycin (pik) cluster was integrated in the chromosome of Streptomyces lividans to create a host which synthesizes TDP-D-desosamine. The pik desosaminyl transferase was also included so that when the strain was transformed with a previously constructed library of expression plasmids encoding genetically modified PKSs that produce different macrolactones, the resulting strains produced desosaminylated derivatives. Although conversion of the macrolactones was generally low, bioassays revealed that, unlike their aglycone precursors, these novel macrolides possessed antibiotic activity. Conclusions: Based on the structural differences among the compounds that were glycosylated it appears that the desosaminyl transferase from the pik gene cluster is quite tolerant of changes in the macrolactone substrate. Since others have demonstrated tolerance towards modifications in the sugar substituent, one can imagine employing this approach to alter both polyketide and deoxysugar pathways to produce ‘unnatural’ natural product libraries
Keywords :
* Polyketide library , * substrate specificity , * Desosamine , * Glycosyltransferase , * Macrolactone
Journal title :
Chemistry and Biology
Serial Year :
2001
Journal title :
Chemistry and Biology
Record number :
1158378
Link To Document :
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