Title of article :
Construction and in vitro analysis of a new bi-modular polypeptide synthetase for synthesis of N-methylated acyl peptides Review Article
Author/Authors :
Florian Schauwecker، نويسنده , , Frank Pfennig، نويسنده , , Nicolas Grammel، نويسنده , , Ullrich Keller، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
ماهنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2000
Abstract :
Abstract
Background: Many active peptides are synthesized by nonribosomal peptide synthetases (NRPSs), large multimodular enzymes. Each module incorporates one amino acid, and is composed of two domains: an activation domain that activates the substrate amino acid and a condensation domain for peptide-bond formation. Activation domains sometimes contain additional activities (e.g. N-methylation or epimerization). Novel peptides can be generated by swapping domains. Exchange of domains containing N-methylation activity has not been reported, however.
Results: The actinomycin NRPS was used to investigate domain swapping. The first two amino acids of actinomycin are threonine and valine. We replaced the valine activation domain of module 2 with an N-methyl valine (MeVal) activation domain. The recombinant NRPS (AcmTmVe) catalyzes the formation of threonyl–valine. In the presence of S-adenosyl-methionine, valine was converted to MeVal but subsequent dipeptide formation was blocked. When acyl-threonine (the natural intermediate) was present at module 1, formation of acyl-threonine–MeVal occurred. The epimerization domain of AcmTmVe was impaired.
Conclusions: A simple activation domain can be replaced by one with N-methylation activity. The same condensation domain can catalyze peptide-bond formation between N-methyl and nonmethylated amino acids. Modification of the upstream amino acid (i.e. acylation of threonine), however, was required for condensation with MeVal. Steric hindrance reduces chemical reactivity of N-methyl amino acids — perfect substrate positioning may only be achieved with acylated threonine. Loss of the epimerase activity of AcmTmVe suggests N-methyltransferase and epimerase domains, not found together naturally, are incompatible.
Article Outlin
Keywords :
* Modular enzymes , * Nonribosomal peptide synthesis , * Nonribosomal peptide synthetases , * N-methylation
Journal title :
Chemistry and Biology
Journal title :
Chemistry and Biology