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Nature Chemistry

Publication date: 2019-10-01
Volume: 11
Publisher: Nature Research

Author:

Masschelein, Joleen
Sydor, Paulina K ; Hobson, Christian ; Howe, Rhiannon ; Jones, Cerith ; Roberts, Douglas M ; Yap, Zhong Ling ; Parkhill, Julian ; Mahenthiralingam, Eshwar ; Challis, Gregory L

Keywords:

Science & Technology, Physical Sciences, Chemistry, Multidisciplinary, Chemistry, ELONGATION-FACTOR TU, BOND FORMATION, IIA, KETOSYNTHASE, LOGIC, Acinetobacter baumannii, Acylation, Anti-Bacterial Agents, Microbial Sensitivity Tests, Molecular Structure, Polyenes, Polyketide Synthases, 03 Chemical Sciences, Organic Chemistry, 34 Chemical sciences

Abstract:

Polyketide synthases assemble diverse natural products with numerous important applications. The thioester intermediates in polyketide assembly are covalently tethered to acyl carrier protein domains of the synthase. Several mechanisms for polyketide chain release are known, contributing to natural product structural diversification. Here, we report a dual transacylation mechanism for chain release from the enacyloxin polyketide synthase, which assembles an antibiotic with promising activity against Acinetobacter baumannii. A non-elongating ketosynthase domain transfers the polyketide chain from the final acyl carrier protein domain of the synthase to a separate carrier protein, and a non-ribosomal peptide synthetase condensation domain condenses it with (1S,3R,4S)-3,4-dihydroxycyclohexane carboxylic acid. Molecular dissection of this process reveals that non-elongating ketosynthase domain-mediated transacylation circumvents the inability of the condensation domain to recognize the acyl carrier protein domain. Several 3,4-dihydroxycyclohexane carboxylic acid analogues can be employed for chain release, suggesting a promising strategy for producing enacyloxin analogues.