• Title of article

    Engineering a polyketide with a longer chain by insertion of an extra module into the erythromycin-producing polyketide synthase Original Research Article

  • Author/Authors

    Christine J. Rowe، نويسنده , , Ines U B?hm، نويسنده , , Iain P Thomas، نويسنده , , Barrie Wilkinson، نويسنده , , Brian A.M. Rudd، نويسنده , , Graham Foster، نويسنده , , Andrew P Blackaby، نويسنده , , Philip J. Sidebottom، نويسنده , , Ylva Roddis، نويسنده , , Anthony D Buss، نويسنده , , James Staunton، نويسنده , , Peter F Leadlay، نويسنده ,

  • Issue Information
    ماهنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2001
  • Pages
    11
  • From page
    475
  • To page
    485
  • Abstract
    Abstract Background: Modular polyketide synthases catalyse the biosynthesis of medically useful natural products by stepwise chain assembly, with each module of enzyme activities catalysing a separate cycle of polyketide chain extension. Domain swapping between polyketide synthases leads to hybrid multienzymes that yield novel polyketides in a more or less predictable way. No experiments have so far been reported which attempt to enlarge a polyketide synthase by interpolating additional modules. Results: We describe here the construction of tetraketide synthases in which an entire extension module from the rapamycin-producing polyketide synthase is covalently spliced between the first two extension modules of the erythromycin-producing polyketide synthase (DEBS). The extended polyketide synthases thus formed are found to catalyse the synthesis of specific tetraketide products containing an appropriate extra ketide unit. Co-expression in Saccharopolyspora erythraea of the extended DEBS multienzyme with multienzymes DEBS 2 and DEBS 3 leads to the formation, as expected, of novel octaketide macrolactones. In each case the predicted products are accompanied by significant amounts of unextended products, corresponding to those of the unaltered DEBS PKS. We refer to this newly observed phenomenon as ‘skipping’. Conclusions: The strategy exemplified here shows far-reaching possibilities for combinatorial engineering of polyketide natural products, as well as revealing the ability of modular polyketide synthases to ‘skip’ extension modules. The results also provide additional insight into the three-dimensional arrangement of modules within these giant synthases. Article Outline * 1. Introduction
  • Keywords
    * Rapamycin , * Module insertion , * Skipping , * Saccharopolyspora erythraea , * polyketide synthase , * Modular , * erythromycin , * Octaketide
  • Journal title
    Chemistry and Biology
  • Serial Year
    2001
  • Journal title
    Chemistry and Biology
  • Record number

    1158372