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The cyclochlorotine mycotoxin is produced by the nonribosomal peptide synthetase CctN in Talaromyces islandicus ('Penicillium islandicum')

Authors :
Schafhauser, Thomas
Kirchner, Norbert
Kulik, Andreas
Huijbers, Mieke M.E.
Flor, Liane
Caradec, Thibault
Fewer, David P.
Gross, Harald
Jacques, Philippe
Jahn, Linda
Jokela, Jouni
Leclère, Valérie
Ludwig-Müller, Jutta
Sivonen, Kaarina
van Berkel, Willem J.H.
Weber, Tilmann
Wohlleben, Wolfgang
van Pée, Karl-Heinz
Source :
Environmental Microbiology, 18(11), 3728-3741, Environmental Microbiology 18 (2016) 11, Schafhauser, T, Kirchner, N, Kulik, A, Huijbers, M M E, Flor, L, Caradec, T, Fewer, D P, Gross, H, Jacques, P, Jahn, L, Jokela, J, Leclère, V, Ludwig-Müller, J, Sivonen, K, van Berkel, W J H, Weber, T, Wohlleben, W & van Pée, K-H 2016, ' The cyclochlorotine mycotoxin is produced by the nonribosomal peptide synthetase CctN in Talaromyces islandicus (“ Penicillium islandicum ”) ', Environmental Microbiology, vol. 18, no. 11, pp. 3728–3741 . https://doi.org/10.1111/1462-2920.13294
Publication Year :
2016

Abstract

Talaromyces islandicus (“Penicillium islandicum”) is a widespread foodborne mold that produces numerous secondary metabolites, among them potent mycotoxins belonging to different chemical classes. A notable metabolite is the hepatotoxic and carcinogenic pentapeptide cyclochlorotine that contains the unusual amino acids β-phenylalanine, 2-aminobutyric acid and 3,4-dichloroproline. Although the chemical structure has been known for over five decades, nothing is known about the biosynthetic pathway of cyclochlorotine. Bioinformatic analysis of the recently sequenced genome of T. islandicus identified a wealth of gene clusters potentially coding for the synthesis of secondary metabolites. Here we show by RNA interference-mediated gene silencing that a nonribosomal peptide synthetase, CctN, is responsible for the synthesis of cyclochlorotine. Moreover, we identified novel cyclochlorotine chemical variants, whose production also depended on cctN expression. Surprisingly, the halogenase required for cyclochlorotine biosynthesis is not encoded in the cct cluster. Nonetheless, our findings enabled us to propose a detailed model for cyclochlorotine biosynthesis. In addition, comparative genomics revealed cct-like clusters are present in all of the sequenced Talaromyces strains indicating a high prevalence of cyclochlorotine production ability.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
14622912
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Environmental Microbiology, 18(11), 3728-3741, Environmental Microbiology 18 (2016) 11, Schafhauser, T, Kirchner, N, Kulik, A, Huijbers, M M E, Flor, L, Caradec, T, Fewer, D P, Gross, H, Jacques, P, Jahn, L, Jokela, J, Leclère, V, Ludwig-Müller, J, Sivonen, K, van Berkel, W J H, Weber, T, Wohlleben, W & van Pée, K-H 2016, ' The cyclochlorotine mycotoxin is produced by the nonribosomal peptide synthetase CctN in Talaromyces islandicus (“ Penicillium islandicum ”) ', Environmental Microbiology, vol. 18, no. 11, pp. 3728–3741 . https://doi.org/10.1111/1462-2920.13294
Accession number :
edsair.dedup.wf.001..f9f0fde95ef19d59afd44bcedd3c524c
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1111/1462-2920.13294