Title of article
Analysis of the Ambruticin and Jerangolid Gene Clusters of Sorangium cellulosum Reveals Unusual Mechanisms of Polyketide Biosynthesis Original Research Article
Author/Authors
Bryan Julien، نويسنده , , Zong-Qiang Tian، نويسنده , , Ralph Reid، نويسنده , , Christopher D. Reeves، نويسنده ,
Issue Information
ماهنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2006
Pages
10
From page
1277
To page
1286
Abstract
Ambruticins and jerangolids are structurally related antifungal polyketides produced by Sorangium cellulosum strains. Comparative analysis of the gene clusters and characterization of compounds produced by gene knockout strains suggested hypothetical schemes for biosynthesis of these compounds. Polyketide synthase (PKS) architecture suggests that the pyran ring structure common to ambruticins and jerangolids forms by an intramolecular reaction on a PKS-bound intermediate. Disrupting ambM, encoding a discrete enzyme homologous to PKS C-methyltransferase domains, gave 15-desmethylambruticins. Thus, AmbM is required for C-methylation, but not pyran ring formation. Several steps in the post-PKS modification of ambruticin involve new enzymology. Remarkably, the methylcyclopropane ring and putative carbon atom excision during ambruticin biosynthesis apparently occur on the PKS assembly line. The mechanism probably involves a Favorskii rearrangement, but further work is required to elucidate these complex events.
Journal title
Chemistry and Biology
Serial Year
2006
Journal title
Chemistry and Biology
Record number
1159298
Link To Document