Title of article :
Kinetics and regioselectivity of peptide-to-heterocycle conversions by microcin B17 synthetase Original Research Article
Author/Authors :
Peter J. Belshaw، نويسنده , , Ranabir Sinha-Roy، نويسنده , , Neil L. Kelleher، نويسنده , , Christopher T. Walsh، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
ماهنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 1998
Pages :
12
From page :
373
To page :
384
Abstract :
Background: The Escherichia coli peptide antibiotic microcin 1317 (MccB17) contains four oxazole and four thiazole rings introduced post-translationally in the 69 amino acid McbA gene product, an MccB17 precursor, by the microcin B,C,D enzyme complex. Both monocyclic and 4,2-bis-heterocyclic moieties are generated. The enzymatic cyclization involves 14 of the. last 43 amino acids of McbA and requires the presence of the first 26 amino acids that function as a specificity-conferring propeptide. Results: We have constructed maltose-binding protein (MBP)-McbA1–46 fusion proteins and have mutagenized the GIy39-Ser40-Cys41 (GSC) wild-type sequence to assess the regioselectivity and chemoselectivity of MccB17-synthetase-mediated heterocycle formation at the first two loci, residues 40 and 41 of McbA. Four single-site and four double-site substrates showed substantial differences in turnover as assessed by western assays, UV-visible spectroscopy and mass spectrometry. Cysteine-derived thiazoles form at a greater rate than serine-derived oxazoles. Formation of bis-heterocycles is sensitive both to composition and sequence context. Conclusions: The E. coli McbB,C,D MccBl 7 synthetase is the first peptide heterocyclization enzyme to be characterized. This study reveals substantial regioselectivity and chemoselectivity (thiazole > oxazole) at the most aminoterminal bis-heterocyclization site of McbA. The heterocyclization of GSS and GCC mutants of McbA1–46 by MccB17 synthetase demonstrates that the complex can efficiently generate tandem bis-oxazoles and bis-thiazoles, moieties not found in MccB17 but present in natural products such as hennoxazole and bleomycin. The observations suggest a common enzymatic mechanism for the formation of peptide-derived heterocyclic natural products.
Journal title :
Chemistry and Biology
Serial Year :
1998
Journal title :
Chemistry and Biology
Record number :
1158036
Link To Document :
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