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An ATP-Dependent Ligase with Substrate Flexibility Involved in Assembly of the Peptidyl Nucleoside Antibiotic Polyoxin

Authors :
Hongmin Ma
Meng Wang
Neil P. J. Price
Zixin Deng
Pan Wu
He Duan
Wenqing Chen
Jianzhao Qi
Rong Gong
Yang Liu
You-Sheng Cai
Source :
Applied and Environmental Microbiology. 84
Publication Year :
2018
Publisher :
American Society for Microbiology, 2018.

Abstract

Polyoxin (POL) is an unusual peptidyl nucleoside antibiotic, in which the peptidyl moiety and nucleoside skeleton are linked by an amide bond. However, their biosynthesis remains poorly understood. Here, we report the deciphering of PolG as an ATP-dependent ligase responsible for the assembly of POL. A polG mutant is capable of accumulating multiple intermediates, including the peptidyl moiety (carbamoylpolyoxamic acid [CPOAA]) and the nucleoside skeletons (POL-C and the previously overlooked thymine POL-C). We further demonstrate that PolG employs an ATP-dependent mechanism for amide bond formation and that the generation of the hybrid nucleoside antibiotic POL-N is also governed by PolG. Finally, we determined that the deduced ATP-binding sites are functionally essential for PolG and that they are highly conserved in a number of related ATP-dependent ligases. These insights have allowed us to propose a catalytic mechanism for the assembly of peptidyl nucleoside antibiotic via an acyl-phosphate intermediate and have opened the way for the combinatorial biosynthesis/pathway engineering of this group of nucleoside antibiotics. IMPORTANCE POL is well known for its remarkable antifungal bioactivities and unusual structural features. Actually, elucidation of the POL assembly logic not only provides the enzymatic basis for further biosynthetic understanding of related peptidyl nucleoside antibiotics but also contributes to the rational generation of more hybrid nucleoside antibiotics via synthetic biology strategy.

Details

ISSN :
10985336 and 00992240
Volume :
84
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Applied and Environmental Microbiology
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....9f21aa7840495f739af8acce09f1b010
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1128/aem.00501-18