Title of article :
The bacitracin biosynthesis operon of Bacillus licheniformis ATCC 10716: molecular characterization of three multi-modular peptide synthetases Original Research Article
Author/Authors :
Dirk Konz، نويسنده , , Andrea Klens، نويسنده , , Kurt Sch?rgendorfer، نويسنده , , Mohamed A. Marahiel، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
ماهنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 1997
Pages :
11
From page :
927
To page :
937
Abstract :
Background: The branched cyclic dodecylpeptide antibiotic bacitracin, produced by special strains of Bacillus, is synthesized nonribosomally by a large multienzyme complex composed of the three bacitracin synthetases BA1, BA2 and BA3. These enzymes activate and incorporate the constituent amino acids of bacitracin by a thiotemplate mechanism in a pathway driven by a protein template. The biochemical features of these enzymes have been studied intensively but little is known about the molecular organization of their genes. Results: The entire bacitracin synthetase operon containing the genes bacA-bacC was cloned and sequenced, identifying a modular structure typical of peptide synthetases. The bacA gene product (BA1, 598 kDa) contains five modules, with an internal epimerization domain attached to the fourth; bacB encodes BA2 (297 kDa), and has two modules and a carboxy-terminal epimerization domain; bacC encodes BA3, five modules (723 kDa) with additional internal epimerization domains attached to the second and fourth. A carboxy-terminal putative thioesterase domain was also detected in BA3. A putative cyclization domain was found in BA1 that may be involved in thiazoline ring formation. The adenylation/thioester-binding domains of the first two BA1 modules were overproduced and the detected amino-acid specificity coincides with the first two amino acids in bacitracin. Disruption of chromosomal bacB resulted in a bacitracin-deficient mutant. Conclusions: The genes encoding the bacitracin synthetases BA1, BA2 and BA3 are organized in an operon, the structure of which reflects the modular architecture expected of peptide synthetases. In addition, a putative thiazoline ring formation domain was identified in the BA1 gene.
Journal title :
Chemistry and Biology
Serial Year :
1997
Journal title :
Chemistry and Biology
Record number :
1157983
Link To Document :
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