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CAS: 497162-51-3
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Yunqi Liu

Institute of Chemistry, Chinese Academy of Sciences
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Wei Huang

Institute of Chemistry, Chinese Academy of Sciences
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Wen Liu

Chinese Academy of Sciences
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Qin Zhang

Sichuan University
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Li Zhang

China Agricultural University
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Wenjun Zhang

University of California
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Co-reporter: Zhe Rui, Wei Huang, Fei Xu, Mo Han, Xinyu Liu, Shuangjun Lin, and Wenjun Zhang
pp: 1765
Publication Date(Web):June 5, 2015
DOI: 10.1021/acschembio.5b00284
Sparsomycin is a model protein synthesis inhibitor that blocks peptide bond formation by binding to the large ribosome subunit. It is a unique dipeptidyl alcohol, consisting of a uracil acrylic acid moiety and a monooxo-dithioacetal group. To elucidate the biosynthetic logic of sparsomycin, a biosynthetic gene cluster for sparsomycin was identified from the producer Streptomyces sparsogenes by genome mining, targeted gene mutations, and heterologous expression. Both the genetic and enzymatic studies revealed a minimum set of non-ribosomal peptide synthetases needed for generating the dipeptidyl alcohol scaffold of sparsomycin, featuring unusual mechanisms in dipeptidyl assembly and off-loading.
Co-reporter: Joyce Liu, Xuejun Zhu, Ryan F. Seipke, and Wenjun Zhang
pp: 559
Publication Date(Web):October 2, 2014
DOI: 10.1021/sb5003136
Antimycins are a family of natural products generated from a hybrid nonribosomal peptide synthetase (NRPS)-polyketide synthase (PKS) assembly line. Although they possess an array of useful biological activities, their structural complexity makes chemical synthesis challenging, and their biosynthesis has thus far been dependent on slow-growing source organisms. Here, we reconstituted the biosynthesis of antimycins in Escherichia coli, a versatile host that is robust and easy to manipulate genetically. Along with Streptomyces genetic studies, the heterologous expression of different combinations of ant genes enabled us to systematically confirm the functions of the modification enzymes, AntHIJKL and AntO, in the biosynthesis of the 3-formamidosalicylate pharmacophore of antimycins. Our E. coli-based antimycin production system can not only be used to engineer the increased production of these bioactive compounds, but it also paves the way for the facile generation of novel and diverse antimycin analogues through combinatorial biosynthesis.Keywords: 3-formamidosalicylate; antimycin biosynthesis; formyltransferase; heterologous expression; multicomponent oxygenase; nonribosomal peptide/polyketide hybrid;

Emily P. Balskus

Harvard University
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Chaitan Khosla

Stanford University
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Neil L. Kelleher

Northwestern University
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Co-reporter: Anthony W. Goering, Ryan A. McClure, James R. Doroghazi, Jessica C. Albright, Nicole A. Haverland, Yongbo Zhang, Kou-San Ju, Regan J. Thomson, William W. Metcalf, and Neil L. Kelleher
pp: 99
Publication Date(Web):January 20, 2016
DOI: 10.1021/acscentsci.5b00331
For more than half a century the pharmaceutical industry has sifted through natural products produced by microbes, uncovering new scaffolds and fashioning them into a broad range of vital drugs. We sought a strategy to reinvigorate the discovery of natural products with distinctive structures using bacterial genome sequencing combined with metabolomics. By correlating genetic content from 178 actinomycete genomes with mass spectrometry-enabled analyses of their exported metabolomes, we paired new secondary metabolites with their biosynthetic gene clusters. We report the use of this new approach to isolate and characterize tambromycin, a new chlorinated natural product, composed of several nonstandard amino acid monomeric units, including a unique pyrrolidine-containing amino acid we name tambroline. Tambromycin shows antiproliferative activity against cancerous human B- and T-cell lines. The discovery of tambromycin via large-scale correlation of gene clusters with metabolites (a.k.a. metabologenomics) illuminates a path for structure-based discovery of natural products at a sharply increased rate.

Igal Szleifer

Northwestern University
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