20 results on '"Kallifidas D"'
Search Results
2. Biosynthesis of Dolastatin 10 in Marine Cyanobacteria, a Prototype for Multiple Approved Cancer Drugs.
- Author
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Kallifidas D, Dhakal D, Chen M, Chen QY, Kokkaliari S, Colon Rosa NA, Ratnayake R, Bruner SD, Paul VJ, Ding Y, and Luesch H
- Subjects
- Oligopeptides chemistry, Depsipeptides pharmacology, Depsipeptides chemistry, Antineoplastic Agents pharmacology, Antineoplastic Agents chemistry, Cyanobacteria chemistry, Neoplasms
- Abstract
Dolastatin 10, a potent tubulin-targeting marine anticancer natural product, provided the basis for the development of six FDA-approved antibody-drug conjugates. Through the screening of cyanobacterial Caldora penicillata environmental DNA libraries and metagenome sequencing, we identified its biosynthetic gene cluster. Functional prediction of 10 enzymes encoded in the 39 kb cluster supports the dolastatin 10 biosynthesis. The nonheme diiron monooxygenase DolJ was biochemically characterized to mediate the terminal thiazole formation in dolastatin 10.
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. Heterologous Production of the C33-C45 Polyketide Fragment of Anticancer Apratoxins in a Cyanobacterial Host.
- Author
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Dhakal D, Kallifidas D, Chen M, Kokkaliari S, Chen QY, Paul VJ, Ding Y, and Luesch H
- Subjects
- Polyketide Synthases genetics, Polyketides, Antineoplastic Agents pharmacology, Anabaena genetics
- Abstract
A polyketide synthase subcluster of cytotoxic apratoxin A was isolated from a Moorena bouillonii environmental DNA library and engineered with a thioesterase II domain for heterologous expression in the filamentous cyanobacterium Anabaena sp. PCC7120. Further engineering with a rhamnose-inducible promoter led to the production of (2 R ,3 R ,5 R ,7 R )-3,7-dihydroxy-2,5,8,8-tetramethylnonanoic acid, a stereogenically rich chiral building block that is important to the efficient synthesis of apratoxin analogues, representing the first synthetic biology attempt for this type of polyketide fragment.
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
4. A Modular Synthetic Route Involving N -Aryl-2-nitrosoaniline Intermediates Leads to a New Series of 3-Substituted Halogenated Phenazine Antibacterial Agents.
- Author
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Yang H, Kundra S, Chojnacki M, Liu K, Fuse MA, Abouelhassan Y, Kallifidas D, Zhang P, Huang G, Jin S, Ding Y, Luesch H, Rohde KH, Dunman PM, Lemos JA, and Huigens RW 3rd
- Subjects
- Animals, Anti-Bacterial Agents pharmacology, Anti-Bacterial Agents therapeutic use, Biofilms drug effects, Cell Line, Cell Survival drug effects, Disease Models, Animal, Drug Design, Female, Halogenation, Humans, Iron chemistry, Iron Deficiencies, Methicillin-Resistant Staphylococcus aureus drug effects, Methicillin-Resistant Staphylococcus aureus physiology, Mice, Mice, Inbred BALB C, Mycobacterium tuberculosis drug effects, Phenazines pharmacology, Phenazines therapeutic use, Staphylococcal Infections drug therapy, Structure-Activity Relationship, Wound Healing drug effects, Aniline Compounds chemistry, Anti-Bacterial Agents chemical synthesis, Phenazines chemistry
- Abstract
Pathogenic bacteria demonstrate incredible abilities to evade conventional antibiotics through the development of resistance and formation of dormant, surface-attached biofilms. Therefore, agents that target and eradicate planktonic and biofilm bacteria are of significant interest. We explored a new series of halogenated phenazines (HP) through the use of N -aryl-2-nitrosoaniline synthetic intermediates that enabled functionalization of the 3-position of this scaffold. Several HPs demonstrated potent antibacterial and biofilm-killing activities ( e.g. , HP 29 , against methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus : MIC = 0.075 μM; MBEC = 2.35 μM), and transcriptional analysis revealed that HPs 3 , 28 , and 29 induce rapid iron starvation in MRSA biofilms. Several HPs demonstrated excellent activities against Mycobacterium tuberculosis (HP 34 , MIC = 0.80 μM against CDC1551). This work established new SAR insights, and HP 29 demonstrated efficacy in dorsal wound infection models in mice. Encouraged by these findings, we believe that HPs could lead to significant advances in the treatment of challenging infections.
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
5. High-Yield Production of Herbicidal Thaxtomins and Thaxtomin Analogs in a Nonpathogenic Streptomyces Strain.
- Author
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Jiang G, Zhang Y, Powell MM, Zhang P, Zuo R, Zhang Y, Kallifidas D, Tieu AM, Luesch H, Loria R, and Ding Y
- Subjects
- Gene Expression Regulation, Bacterial, Streptomyces genetics, Virulence Factors metabolism, Herbicides metabolism, Indoles metabolism, Multigene Family, Piperazines metabolism, Streptomyces metabolism, Synthetic Biology methods
- Abstract
Thaxtomins are virulence factors of most plant-pathogenic Streptomyces strains. Due to their potent herbicidal activity, attractive environmental compatibility, and inherent biodegradability, thaxtomins are key active ingredients of bioherbicides approved by the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency. However, the low yield of thaxtomins in native Streptomyces producers limits their wide agricultural applications. Here, we describe the high-yield production of thaxtomins in a heterologous host. The thaxtomin gene cluster from S. scabiei 87.22 was cloned and expressed in S. albus J1074 after chromosomal integration. The production of thaxtomins and nitrotryptophan analogs was observed using liquid chromatography-mass spectrometry (LC-MS) analysis. When the engineered S. albus J1074 was cultured in the minimal medium Thx defined medium supplemented with 1% cellobiose (TDMc), the yield of the most abundant and herbicidal analog, thaxtomin A, was 10 times higher than that in S. scabiei 87.22, and optimization of the medium resulted in the highest yield of thaxtomin analogs at about 222 mg/liter. Further engineering of the thaxtomin biosynthetic gene cluster through gene deletion led to the production of multiple biosynthetic intermediates important to the chemical synthesis of new analogs. Additionally, the versatility of the thaxtomin biosynthetic system in S. albus J1074 was capitalized on to produce one unnatural fluorinated analog, 5-fluoro-thaxtomin A (5-F-thaxtomin A), whose structure was elucidated by a combination of MS and one-dimensional (1D) and 2D nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) analyses. Natural and unnatural thaxtomins demonstrated potent herbicidal activity in radish seedling assays. These results indicated that S. albus J1074 has the potential to produce thaxtomins and analogs thereof with high yield, fostering their agricultural applications. IMPORTANCE Thaxtomins are agriculturally valuable herbicidal natural products, but the productivity of native producers is limiting. Heterologous expression of the thaxtomin gene cluster in S. albus J1074 resulted in the highest yield of thaxtomins ever reported, representing a significant leap forward in its wide agricultural use. Furthermore, current synthetic routes to thaxtomins and analogs are lengthy, and two thaxtomin biosynthetic intermediates produced at high yields in this work can provide precursors and building blocks to advanced synthetic routes. Importantly, the production of 5-F-thaxtomin A in engineered S. albus J1074 demonstrated a viable alternative to chemical methods in the synthesis of new thaxtomin analogs. Moreover, our work presents an attractive synthetic biology strategy to improve the supply of herbicidal thaxtomins, likely finding general applications in the discovery and production of many other bioactive natural products., (Copyright © 2018 American Society for Microbiology.)
- Published
- 2018
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6. An Efficient Buchwald-Hartwig/Reductive Cyclization for the Scaffold Diversification of Halogenated Phenazines: Potent Antibacterial Targeting, Biofilm Eradication, and Prodrug Exploration.
- Author
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Garrison AT, Abouelhassan Y, Kallifidas D, Tan H, Kim YS, Jin S, Luesch H, and Huigens RW 3rd
- Subjects
- Cyclization, HeLa Cells, Humans, Methicillin-Resistant Staphylococcus aureus drug effects, Methicillin-Resistant Staphylococcus aureus physiology, Microbial Sensitivity Tests, Anti-Bacterial Agents chemistry, Anti-Bacterial Agents pharmacology, Biofilms drug effects, Halogenation, Phenazines chemistry, Phenazines pharmacology
- Abstract
Bacterial biofilms are surface-attached communities comprised of nonreplicating persister cells housed within a protective extracellular matrix. Biofilms display tolerance toward conventional antibiotics, occur in ∼80% of infections, and lead to >500000 deaths annually. We recently identified halogenated phenazine (HP) analogues which demonstrate biofilm-eradicating activities against priority pathogens; however, the synthesis of phenazines presents limitations. Herein, we report a refined HP synthesis which expedited the identification of improved biofilm-eradicating agents. 1-Methoxyphenazine scaffolds were generated through a Buchwald-Hartwig cross-coupling (70% average yield) and subsequent reductive cyclization (68% average yield), expediting the discovery of potent biofilm-eradicating HPs (e.g., 61: MRSA BAA-1707 MBEC = 4.69 μM). We also developed bacterial-selective prodrugs (reductively activated quinone-alkyloxycarbonyloxymethyl moiety) to afford HP 87, which demonstrated excellent antibacterial and biofilm eradication activities against MRSA BAA-1707 (MIC = 0.15 μM, MBEC = 12.5 μM). Furthermore, active HPs herein exhibit negligible cytotoxic or hemolytic effects, highlighting their potential to target biofilms.
- Published
- 2018
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7. Rational engineering of Streptomyces albus J1074 for the overexpression of secondary metabolite gene clusters.
- Author
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Kallifidas D, Jiang G, Ding Y, and Luesch H
- Subjects
- Multigene Family genetics, Streptomyces genetics, Whole Genome Sequencing methods
- Abstract
Background: Genome sequencing revealed that Streptomyces sp. can dedicate up to ~ 10% of their genomes for the biosynthesis of bioactive secondary metabolites. However, the majority of these biosynthetic gene clusters are only weakly expressed or not at all. Indeed, the biosynthesis of natural products is highly regulated through integrating multiple nutritional and environmental signals perceived by pleiotropic and pathway-specific transcriptional regulators. Although pathway-specific refactoring has been a proved, productive approach for the activation of individual gene clusters, the construction of a global super host strain by targeting pleiotropic-specific genes for the expression of multiple diverse gene clusters is an attractive approach., Results: Streptomyces albus J1074 is a gifted heterologous host. To further improve its secondary metabolite expression capability, we rationally engineered the host by targeting genes affecting NADPH availability, precursor flux, cell growth and biosynthetic gene transcriptional activation. These studies led to the activation of the native paulomycin pathway in engineered S. albus strains and importantly the upregulated expression of the heterologous actinorhodin gene cluster., Conclusions: Rational engineering of Streptomyces albus J1074 yielded a series of mutants with improved capabilities for native and heterologous expression of secondary metabolite gene clusters.
- Published
- 2018
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8. A Highly Potent Class of Halogenated Phenazine Antibacterial and Biofilm-Eradicating Agents Accessed Through a Modular Wohl-Aue Synthesis.
- Author
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Yang H, Abouelhassan Y, Burch GM, Kallifidas D, Huang G, Yousaf H, Jin S, Luesch H, and Huigens RW
- Subjects
- Anti-Bacterial Agents chemistry, Bacteria drug effects, Cell Survival, Halogenation, HeLa Cells, Humans, Methicillin-Resistant Staphylococcus aureus drug effects, Microbial Sensitivity Tests, Phenazines chemistry, Spectrophotometry, Ultraviolet, Structure-Activity Relationship, Anti-Bacterial Agents chemical synthesis, Anti-Bacterial Agents pharmacology, Biofilms drug effects, Chemistry Techniques, Synthetic, Phenazines chemical synthesis, Phenazines pharmacology
- Abstract
Unlike individual, free-floating planktonic bacteria, biofilms are surface-attached communities of slow- or non-replicating bacteria encased within a protective extracellular polymeric matrix enabling persistent bacterial populations to tolerate high concentrations of antimicrobials. Our current antibacterial arsenal is composed of growth-inhibiting agents that target rapidly-dividing planktonic bacteria but not metabolically dormant biofilm cells. We report the first modular synthesis of a library of 20 halogenated phenazines (HP), utilizing the Wohl-Aue reaction, that targets both planktonic and biofilm cells. New HPs, including 6-substituted analogues, demonstrate potent antibacterial activities against MRSA, MRSE and VRE (MIC = 0.003-0.78 µM). HPs bind metal(II) cations and demonstrate interesting activity profiles when co-treated in a panel of metal(II) cations in MIC assays. HP 1 inhibited RNA and protein biosynthesis while not inhibiting DNA biosynthesis using
3 H-radiolabeled precursors in macromolecular synthesis inhibition assays against MRSA. New HPs reported here demonstrate potent eradication activities (MBEC = 0.59-9.38 µM) against MRSA, MRSE and VRE biofilms while showing minimal red blood cell lysis or cytotoxicity against HeLa cells. PEG-carbonate HPs 24 and 25 were found to have potent antibacterial activities with significantly improved water solubility. HP small molecules could have a dramatic impact on persistent, biofilm-associated bacterial infection treatments.- Published
- 2017
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9. Structure-Activity Relationships of a Diverse Class of Halogenated Phenazines That Targets Persistent, Antibiotic-Tolerant Bacterial Biofilms and Mycobacterium tuberculosis.
- Author
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Garrison AT, Abouelhassan Y, Norwood VM 4th, Kallifidas D, Bai F, Nguyen MT, Rolfe M, Burch GM, Jin S, Luesch H, and Huigens RW 3rd
- Subjects
- Carbon-13 Magnetic Resonance Spectroscopy, Drug Screening Assays, Antitumor, HeLa Cells, Humans, Microbial Sensitivity Tests, Proton Magnetic Resonance Spectroscopy, Structure-Activity Relationship, Biofilms drug effects, Drug Resistance, Bacterial drug effects, Halogens chemistry, Mycobacterium tuberculosis drug effects, Phenazines chemistry, Phenazines pharmacology
- Abstract
Persistent bacteria, including persister cells within surface-attached biofilms and slow-growing pathogens lead to chronic infections that are tolerant to antibiotics. Here, we describe the structure-activity relationships of a series of halogenated phenazines (HP) inspired by 2-bromo-1-hydroxyphenazine 1. Using multiple synthetic pathways, we probed diverse substitutions of the HP scaffold in the 2-, 4-, 7-, and 8-positions, providing critical information regarding their antibacterial and bacterial eradication profiles. Halogenated phenazine 14 proved to be the most potent biofilm-eradicating agent (≥99.9% persister cell killing) against MRSA (MBEC < 10 μM), MRSE (MBEC = 2.35 μM), and VRE (MBEC = 0.20 μM) biofilms while 11 and 12 demonstrated excellent antibacterial activity against M. tuberculosis (MIC = 3.13 μM). Unlike antimicrobial peptide mimics that eradicate biofilms through the general lysing of membranes, HPs do not lyse red blood cells. HPs are promising agents that effectively target persistent bacteria while demonstrating negligible toxicity against mammalian cells.
- Published
- 2016
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10. Halogenated Phenazines that Potently Eradicate Biofilms, MRSA Persister Cells in Non-Biofilm Cultures, and Mycobacterium tuberculosis.
- Author
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Garrison AT, Abouelhassan Y, Kallifidas D, Bai F, Ukhanova M, Mai V, Jin S, Luesch H, and Huigens RW 3rd
- Subjects
- Anti-Bacterial Agents chemical synthesis, Anti-Bacterial Agents chemistry, Cell Survival drug effects, Cells, Cultured, Dose-Response Relationship, Drug, HeLa Cells, Humans, Microbial Sensitivity Tests, Molecular Structure, Mycobacterium tuberculosis growth & development, Phenazines chemical synthesis, Phenazines chemistry, Structure-Activity Relationship, Anti-Bacterial Agents pharmacology, Biofilms drug effects, Methicillin-Resistant Staphylococcus aureus cytology, Methicillin-Resistant Staphylococcus aureus drug effects, Mycobacterium tuberculosis drug effects, Phenazines pharmacology
- Abstract
Conventional antibiotics are ineffective against non-replicating bacteria (for example, bacteria within biofilms). We report a series of halogenated phenazines (HP), inspired by marine antibiotic 1, that targets persistent bacteria. HP 14 demonstrated the most potent biofilm eradication activities to date against MRSA, MRSE, and VRE biofilms (MBEC = 0.2-12.5 μM), as well as the effective killing of MRSA persister cells in non-biofilm cultures. Frontline MRSA treatments, vancomycin and daptomycin, were unable to eradicate MRSA biofilms or non-biofilm persisters alongside 14. HP 13 displayed potent antibacterial activity against slow-growing M. tuberculosis (MIC = 3.13 μM), the leading cause of death by bacterial infection around the world. HP analogues effectively target persistent bacteria through a mechanism that is non-toxic to mammalian cells and could have a significant impact on treatments for chronic bacterial infections., (© 2015 WILEY-VCH Verlag GmbH & Co. KGaA, Weinheim.)
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
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11. Tetarimycin A, an MRSA-active antibiotic identified through induced expression of environmental DNA gene clusters.
- Author
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Kallifidas D, Kang HS, and Brady SF
- Subjects
- Anti-Bacterial Agents chemistry, Anti-Bacterial Agents pharmacology, Bacteria drug effects, Base Sequence, Cloning, Molecular, Microbial Sensitivity Tests, Models, Molecular, Molecular Sequence Data, Phylogeny, Polycyclic Compounds pharmacology, Staphylococcus aureus genetics, Methicillin-Resistant Staphylococcus aureus, Multigene Family physiology, Polycyclic Compounds chemistry
- Abstract
The propagation of DNA extracted directly from environmental samples in laboratory-grown bacteria provides a means to study natural products encoded in the genomes of uncultured bacteria. However, gene silencing often hampers the functional characterization of gene clusters captured on environmental DNA clones. Here we show that the overexpression of transcription factors found in sequenced environmental DNA-derived biosynthetic gene clusters, in conjunction with traditional culture-broth extract screening, can be used to identify new bioactive secondary metabolites from otherwise-silent gene clusters. Tetarimycin A, a tetracyclic methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA)-active antibiotic, was isolated from the culture-broth extract of Streptomyces albus cultures cotransformed with an environmentally derived type-II polyketide biosynthetic gene cluster and its pathway-specific Streptomyces antibiotic regulatory protein (SARP) cloned under the control of the constitutive ermE* promoter.
- Published
- 2012
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12. Natural product biosynthetic gene diversity in geographically distinct soil microbiomes.
- Author
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Reddy BV, Kallifidas D, Kim JH, Charlop-Powers Z, Feng Z, and Brady SF
- Subjects
- Bacteria classification, Bacteria enzymology, Biodiversity, Genetic Variation, Geography, Polyketide Synthases genetics, Bacteria genetics, Biological Products metabolism, Biosynthetic Pathways genetics, Metagenome, Soil Microbiology
- Abstract
The number of bacterial species estimated to exist on Earth has increased dramatically in recent years. This newly recognized species diversity has raised the possibility that bacterial natural product biosynthetic diversity has also been significantly underestimated by previous culture-based studies. Here, we compare 454-pyrosequenced nonribosomal peptide adenylation domain, type I polyketide ketosynthase domain, and type II polyketide ketosynthase alpha gene fragments amplified from cosmid libraries constructed using DNA isolated from three different arid soils. While 16S rRNA gene sequence analysis indicates these cloned metagenomes contain DNA from similar distributions of major bacterial phyla, we found that they contain almost completely distinct collections of secondary metabolite biosynthetic gene sequences. When grouped at 85% identity, only 1.5% of the adenylation domain, 1.2% of the ketosynthase, and 9.3% of the ketosynthase alpha sequence clusters contained sequences from all three metagenomes. Although there is unlikely to be a simple correlation between biosynthetic gene sequence diversity and the diversity of metabolites encoded by the gene clusters in which these genes reside, our analysis further suggests that sequences in one soil metagenome are so distantly related to sequences in another metagenome that they are, in many cases, likely to arise from functionally distinct gene clusters. The marked differences observed among collections of biosynthetic genes found in even ecologically similar environments suggest that prokaryotic natural product biosynthesis diversity is, like bacterial species diversity, potentially much larger than appreciated from culture-based studies.
- Published
- 2012
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13. Reassembly of functionally intact environmental DNA-derived biosynthetic gene clusters.
- Author
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Kallifidas D and Brady SF
- Subjects
- Biological Products metabolism, Biosynthetic Pathways, Cloning, Molecular, Cosmids genetics, Cosmids metabolism, DNA, Bacterial genetics, Gene Library, Molecular Weight, Oligonucleotide Array Sequence Analysis methods, Recombination, Genetic, Saccharomyces cerevisiae genetics, Saccharomyces cerevisiae metabolism, Spheroplasts genetics, Spheroplasts metabolism, DNA, Bacterial isolation & purification, Genome, Bacterial, Multigene Family, Soil Microbiology
- Abstract
Only a small fraction of the bacterial diversity present in natural microbial communities is regularly cultured in the laboratory. Those bacteria that remain recalcitrant to culturing cannot be examined for the production of bioactive secondary metabolites using standard pure-culture approaches. The screening of genomic DNA libraries containing DNA isolated directly from environmental samples (environmental DNA (eDNA)) provides an alternative approach for studying the biosynthetic capacities of these organisms. One drawback of this approach has been that most eDNA isolation procedures do not permit the cloning of DNA fragments of sufficient length to capture large natural product biosynthetic gene clusters in their entirety. Although the construction of eDNA libraries with inserts big enough to capture biosynthetic gene clusters larger than ∼40kb remains challenging, it is possible to access large gene clusters by reassembling them from sets of smaller overlapping fragments using transformation-associated recombination in Saccharomyces cerevisiae. Here, we outline a method for the reassembly of large biosynthetic gene clusters from captured sets of overlapping soil eDNA cosmid clones. Natural product biosynthetic gene clusters reassembled using this approach can then be used directly for functional heterologous expression studies., (Copyright © 2012 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2012
- Full Text
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14. Functional analysis of environmental DNA-derived type II polyketide synthases reveals structurally diverse secondary metabolites.
- Author
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Feng Z, Kallifidas D, and Brady SF
- Subjects
- Aminoglycosides chemistry, Aminoglycosides metabolism, Aminoglycosides pharmacology, Anti-Bacterial Agents chemistry, Anti-Bacterial Agents metabolism, Anti-Bacterial Agents pharmacology, Bacteria classification, Bacteria isolation & purification, DNA, Bacterial chemistry, Gene Library, Genetic Variation, Methicillin-Resistant Staphylococcus aureus drug effects, Methicillin-Resistant Staphylococcus aureus growth & development, Molecular Sequence Data, Molecular Structure, Phylogeny, Polyketide Synthases metabolism, Sequence Analysis, DNA, Streptomyces genetics, Streptomyces metabolism, Bacteria genetics, DNA, Bacterial genetics, Polyketide Synthases genetics, Soil Microbiology
- Abstract
A single gram of soil is predicted to contain thousands of unique bacterial species. The majority of these species remain recalcitrant to standard culture methods, prohibiting their use as sources of unique bioactive small molecules. The cloning and analysis of DNA extracted directly from environmental samples (environmental DNA, eDNA) provides a means of exploring the biosynthetic capacity of natural bacterial populations. Environmental DNA libraries contain large reservoirs of bacterial genetic diversity from which new secondary metabolite gene clusters can be systematically recovered and studied. The identification and heterologous expression of type II polyketide synthase-containing eDNA clones is reported here. Functional analysis of three soil DNA-derived polyketide synthase systems in Streptomyces albus revealed diverse metabolites belonging to well-known, rare, and previously uncharacterized structural families. The first of these systems is predicted to encode the production of the known antibiotic landomycin E. The second was found to encode the production of a metabolite with a previously uncharacterized pentacyclic ring system. The third was found to encode the production of unique KB-3346-5 derivatives, which show activity against methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus and vancomycin-resistant Enterococcus faecalis. These results, together with those of other small-molecule-directed metagenomic studies, suggest that culture-independent approaches are capable of accessing biosynthetic diversity that has not yet been extensively explored using culture-based methods. The large-scale functional screening of eDNA clones should be a productive strategy for generating structurally previously uncharacterized chemical entities for use in future drug development efforts.
- Published
- 2011
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15. Cloning large natural product gene clusters from the environment: piecing environmental DNA gene clusters back together with TAR.
- Author
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Kim JH, Feng Z, Bauer JD, Kallifidas D, Calle PY, and Brady SF
- Subjects
- California, Escherichia coli genetics, Saccharomyces cerevisiae genetics, Utah, Cloning, Molecular methods, DNA, Complementary genetics, Genome, Bacterial genetics, Multigene Family genetics, Soil Microbiology
- Abstract
A single gram of soil can contain thousands of unique bacterial species, of which only a small fraction is regularly cultured in the laboratory. Although the fermentation of cultured microorganisms has provided access to numerous bioactive secondary metabolites, with these same methods it is not possible to characterize the natural products encoded by the uncultured majority. The heterologous expression of biosynthetic gene clusters cloned from DNA extracted directly from environmental samples (eDNA) has the potential to provide access to the chemical diversity encoded in the genomes of uncultured bacteria. One of the challenges facing this approach has been that many natural product biosynthetic gene clusters are too large to be readily captured on a single fragment of cloned eDNA. The reassembly of large eDNA-derived natural product gene clusters from collections of smaller overlapping clones represents one potential solution to this problem. Unfortunately, traditional methods for the assembly of large DNA sequences from multiple overlapping clones can be technically challenging. Here we present a general experimental framework that permits the recovery of large natural product biosynthetic gene clusters on overlapping soil-derived eDNA cosmid clones and the reassembly of these large gene clusters using transformation-associated recombination (TAR) in Saccharomyces cerevisiae. The development of practical methods for the rapid assembly of biosynthetic gene clusters from collections of overlapping eDNA clones is an important step toward being able to functionally study larger natural product gene clusters from uncultured bacteria., (Copyright 2010 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.)
- Published
- 2010
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16. The sigmaR regulon of Streptomyces coelicolor A32 reveals a key role in protein quality control during disulphide stress.
- Author
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Kallifidas D, Thomas D, Doughty P, and Paget MSB
- Subjects
- Bacterial Proteins genetics, Bacterial Proteins metabolism, Heat-Shock Proteins genetics, Protein Folding drug effects, Proteins genetics, RNA genetics, Repressor Proteins genetics, Sigma Factor chemistry, Sigma Factor genetics, Streptomyces coelicolor drug effects, Streptomyces coelicolor genetics, Transcription Factors metabolism, Diamide pharmacology, Disulfides metabolism, Proteins metabolism, Regulon, Sigma Factor metabolism, Streptomyces coelicolor metabolism
- Abstract
Diamide is an artificial disulphide-generating electrophile that mimics an oxidative shift in the cellular thiol-disulphide redox state (disulphide stress). The Gram-positive bacterium Streptomyces coelicolor senses and responds to disulphide stress through the sigma(R)-RsrA system, which comprises an extracytoplasmic function (ECF) sigma factor and a redox-active anti-sigma factor. Known targets that aid in the protection and recovery from disulphide stress include the thioredoxin system and genes involved in producing the major thiol buffer mycothiol. Here we determine the global response to diamide in wild-type and sigR mutant backgrounds to understand the role of sigma(R) in this response and to reveal additional regulatory pathways that allow cells to cope with disulphide stress. In addition to thiol oxidation, diamide was found to cause protein misfolding and aggregation, which elicited the induction of the HspR heat-shock regulon. Although this response is sigma(R)-independent, sigma(R) does directly control Clp and Lon ATP-dependent AAA(+) proteases, which may partly explain the reduced ability of a sigR mutant to resolubilize protein aggregates. sigma(R) also controls msrA and msrB methionine sulphoxide reductase genes, implying that sigma(R)-RsrA is responsible for the maintenance of both cysteine and methionine residues during oxidative stress. This work shows that the sigma(R)-RsrA system plays a more significant role in protein quality control than previously realized, and emphasizes the importance of controlling the cellular thiol-disulphide redox balance.
- Published
- 2010
- Full Text
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17. The zinc-responsive regulator Zur controls expression of the coelibactin gene cluster in Streptomyces coelicolor.
- Author
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Kallifidas D, Pascoe B, Owen GA, Strain-Damerell CM, Hong HJ, and Paget MS
- Subjects
- Bacterial Proteins genetics, Oligonucleotide Array Sequence Analysis, Phenotype, Polymerase Chain Reaction, Bacterial Proteins physiology, Gene Expression Regulation, Bacterial genetics, Gene Expression Regulation, Bacterial physiology, Multigene Family genetics, Streptomyces coelicolor genetics, Streptomyces coelicolor metabolism
- Abstract
Streptomyces coelicolor mutants lacking the zinc-responsive Zur repressor are conditionally defective in sporulation, presumably due to the overexpression of one or more Zur target genes. Gene disruption analyses revealed that deregulation of previously known Zur targets was not responsible for the sporulation phenotype. We used microarrays to identify further Zur targets and discovered that Zur controls a cluster of genes predicted to direct synthesis of an uncharacterized siderophore-related non-ribosomally encoded peptide designated coelibactin. Disruption of a key coelibactin biosynthetic gene suppressed the Zur sporulation phenotype, suggesting that deregulation of coelibactin synthesis inhibits sporulation.
- Published
- 2010
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18. Zinc-responsive regulation of alternative ribosomal protein genes in Streptomyces coelicolor involves zur and sigmaR.
- Author
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Owen GA, Pascoe B, Kallifidas D, and Paget MS
- Subjects
- Bacterial Proteins genetics, Bacterial Proteins physiology, Base Sequence, Electrophoretic Mobility Shift Assay, Gene Expression Regulation, Bacterial drug effects, Molecular Sequence Data, Mutation, Operon genetics, Promoter Regions, Genetic, Protein Binding, Ribosomal Proteins genetics, Sigma Factor genetics, Streptomyces coelicolor drug effects, Streptomyces coelicolor genetics, Transcription, Genetic, Zinc deficiency, Bacterial Proteins metabolism, Ribosomal Proteins metabolism, Sigma Factor metabolism, Streptomyces coelicolor metabolism, Zinc pharmacology
- Abstract
Streptomyces coelicolor contains paralogous versions of seven ribosomal proteins (S14, S18, L28, L31, L32, L33, and L36), which differ in their potential to bind structural zinc. The paralogues are termed C(+) or C(-) on the basis of the presence or absence of putative cysteine ligands. Here, mutational studies suggest that the C(-) version of L31 can functionally replace its C(+) paralogue only when expressed at an artificially elevated level. We show that the level of expression of four transcriptional units encoding C(-) proteins is elevated under conditions of zinc deprivation. Zur controls the expression of three transcriptional units (including rpmG2, rpmE2, rpmB2, rpsN2, rpmF2, and possibly rpsR2). Zur also controls the expression of the znuACB operon, which is predicted to encode a high-affinity zinc transport system. Surprisingly, the zinc-responsive control of the rpmG3-rpmJ2 operon is dictated by sigma(R), a sigma factor that was previously shown to control the response to disulfide stress in S. coelicolor. The induction of sigma(R) activity during zinc limitation establishes an important link between thiol-disulfide metabolism and zinc homeostasis.
- Published
- 2007
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19. Distribution of streptomycin resistance and biosynthesis genes in streptomycetes recovered from different soil sites.
- Author
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Tolba S, Egan S, Kallifidas D, and Wellington EM
- Abstract
Streptomycin resistant streptomycetes were isolated from four diverse sites. Two sites in Germany were sampled and included an agricultural experimental plot of apple trees which had a history of streptomycin application (AR) and a control site without antibiotic application (CR). Two sites in the UK were sampled; a pastureland site which had sewage injection (DW) and an agricultural site (CW). The actinomycete counts indicated a high proportion of streptomycin resistant isolates in the CW soil. Streptomycetes were identified by partial sequencing of the 16S rDNA. PCR product of the hypervariable gamma region of 16S rDNA allowed analysis by denaturing gradient gel electrophoresis to assess the diversity within the isolates. The streptomycin and sewage sludge treated sites showed decreased diversity within streptomycete populations. Isolates were screened for the streptomycin resistance gene, strA, and flanking biosynthesis gene, strB1. Distribution of these genes indicated the prevalence of str genes in the streptomycin treated soil. Evidence of horizontal gene transfer was recorded in isolates identified as Streptomyces platensis recovered from CR and AR sites which had acquired a streptomycin resistance gene homologous to that found in Streptomyces griseus. Members of the latter species were the most abundant streptomycin resistant streptomycetes isolated from all soils.
- Published
- 2002
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20. Transfer of streptomycin biosynthesis gene clusters within streptomycetes isolated from soil.
- Author
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Egan S, Wiener P, Kallifidas D, and Wellington EM
- Subjects
- Chromosome Mapping, Soil Microbiology, Species Specificity, Streptomyces isolation & purification, Streptomyces metabolism, Streptomyces griseus genetics, Genes, Bacterial, Multigene Family, Streptomyces genetics, Streptomycin biosynthesis
- Abstract
Streptomyces strains isolated from soil were found to possess various numbers of genes from the streptomycin biosynthesis cluster. The strains missing genes from the cluster also lacked the ability to produce streptomycin. Two of the isolates which contain only part of the cluster are apparently recipients of a gene transfer event. The implications for the role of gene transfer in antibiotic evolution are discussed.
- Published
- 1998
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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