1(2H)-Naphthalenone,octahydro-, (4aR,8aS)-rel-

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CAS: 21370-71-8
MF: C10H16O
MW: 152.23344
Synonyms: 1(2H)-Naphthalenone,octahydro-, (4aR,8aS)-rel-

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Wan-Hong Ma

The Chinese Academy of Sciences
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Chuncheng Chen

Institute of Chemistry, Chinese Academy of Sciences
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Igal Szleifer

Northwestern University
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Shiou-Chuan Tsai

University of California
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Co-reporter: Pouya Javidpour, Abhirup Das, Chaitan Khosla, and Shiou-Chuan Tsai
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Publication Date(Web):July 21, 2011
DOI: 10.1021/bi2006866
Bacterial aromatic polyketides that include many antibiotic and antitumor therapeutics are biosynthesized by the type II polyketide synthase (PKS), which consists of 5–10 stand-alone enzymatic domains. Hedamycin, an antitumor antibiotic polyketide, is uniquely primed with a hexadienyl group generated by a type I PKS followed by coupling to a downstream type II PKS to biosynthesize a 24-carbon polyketide, whose C9 position is reduced by hedamycin type II ketoreductase (hedKR). HedKR is homologous to the actinorhodin KR (actKR), for which we have conducted extensive structural studies previously. How hedKR can accommodate a longer polyketide substrate than the actKR, and the molecular basis of its regio- and stereospecificities, is not well understood. Here we present a detailed study of hedKR that sheds light on its specificity. Sequence alignment of KRs predicts that hedKR is less active than actKR, with significant differences in substrate/inhibitor recognition. In vitro and in vivo assays of hedKR confirmed this hypothesis. The hedKR crystal structure further provides the molecular basis for the observed differences between hedKR and actKR in the recognition of substrates and inhibitors. Instead of the 94-PGG-96 motif observed in actKR, hedKR has the 92-NGG-94 motif, leading to S-dominant stereospecificity, whose molecular basis can be explained by the crystal structure. Together with mutations, assay results, docking simulations, and the hedKR crystal structure, a model for the observed regio- and stereospecificities is presented herein that elucidates how different type II KRs recognize substrates with different chain lengths, yet precisely reduce only the C9-carbonyl group. The molecular features of hedKR important for regio- and stereospecificities can potentially be applied to biosynthesize new polyketides via protein engineering that rationally controls polyketide ketoreduction.

Melanie S. Sanford

University of Michigan
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Viresh H. Rawal

The University of Chicago
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David E. Cane

Brown University
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Co-reporter: Xinqiang Xie, Ashish Garg, Adrian T. Keatinge-Clay, Chaitan Khosla, and David E. Cane
pp: 1179-1186
Publication Date(Web):February 10, 2016
DOI: 10.1021/acs.biochem.6b00024
The role of the conserved active site tyrosine and serine residues in epimerization catalyzed by polyketide synthase ketoreductase (PKS KR) domains has been investigated. Both mutant and wild-type forms of epimerase-active KR domains, including the intrinsically redox-inactive EryKR3° and PicKR3° as well as redox-inactive mutants of EryKR1, were incubated with [2-2H]-(2R,3S)-2-methyl-3-hydroxypentanoyl-SACP ([2-2H]-2) and 0.05 equiv of NADP+ in the presence of the redox-active, epimerase-inactive EryKR6 domain. The residual epimerase activity of each mutant was determined by tandem equilibrium isotope exchange, in which the first-order, time-dependent washout of isotope from 2 was monitored by liquid chromatography–tandem mass spectrometry with quantitation of the deuterium content of the diagnostic pantetheinate ejection fragment (4). Replacement of the active site Tyr or Ser residues, alone or together, significantly reduced the observed epimerase activity of each KR domain with minimal effect on substrate binding. Our results demonstrate that the epimerase and reductase activities of PKS KR domains share a common active site, with both reactions utilizing the same pair of Tyr and Ser residues.

Richard J. Hooley

University of California
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Ryan A. Shenvi

The Scripps Research Institute
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John A. Murphy

University of Strathclyde
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