Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: https://doi.org/10.1021/ja902261a
Title: Escherichia coli allows efficient modular incorporation of newly isolated quinomycin biosynthetic enzyme into echinomycin biosynthetic pathway for rational design and synthesis of potent antibiotic unnatural natural product
Authors: Watanabe, K.
Hotta, K. 
Nakaya, M.
Praseuth, A.P.
Wang, C.C.C.
Inada, D.
Takahashi, K.
Fukushi, E.
Oguri, H.
Oikawa, H.
Issue Date: 8-Jul-2009
Citation: Watanabe, K., Hotta, K., Nakaya, M., Praseuth, A.P., Wang, C.C.C., Inada, D., Takahashi, K., Fukushi, E., Oguri, H., Oikawa, H. (2009-07-08). Escherichia coli allows efficient modular incorporation of newly isolated quinomycin biosynthetic enzyme into echinomycin biosynthetic pathway for rational design and synthesis of potent antibiotic unnatural natural product. Journal of the American Chemical Society 131 (26) : 9347-9353. ScholarBank@NUS Repository. https://doi.org/10.1021/ja902261a
Abstract: Natural products display impressive activities against a wide range of targets, including viruses, microbes, and tumors. However, their clinical use is hampered frequently by their scarcity and undesirable toxicity. Not only can engineering Escherichia coli for plasmid-based pharmacophore biosynthesis offer alternative means of simple and easily scalable production of valuable yet hard-to-obtain compounds, but also carries a potential for providing a straightforward and efficient means of preparing natural product analogs. The quinomycin family of nonribosomal peptides, including echinomycin, triostin A, and SW-163s, are important secondary metabolites imparting antibiotic antitumor activity via DNA bisintercalation. Previously we have shown the production of echinomycin and triostin A in E. coli using our convenient and modular plasmid system to introduce these heterologous biosynthetic pathways into E. coli. However, we have yet to develop a novel biosynthetic pathway capable of producing bioactive unnatural natural products in E. coli. Here we report an identification of a new gene cluster responsible for the biosynthesis of SW-163s that involves previously unknown biosynthesis of (+)-(1S, 2S)-norcoronamic acid and generation of aliphatic side chains of various sizes via iterative methylation of an unactivated carbon center. Substituting an echinomycin biosynthetic gene with a gene from the newly identified SW-163 biosynthetic gene cluster, we were able to rationally re-engineer the plasmid-based echinomycin biosynthetic pathway for the production of a novel bioactive compound in E. coli. © 2009 American Chemical Society.
Source Title: Journal of the American Chemical Society
URI: http://scholarbank.nus.edu.sg/handle/10635/100601
ISSN: 00027863
DOI: 10.1021/ja902261a
Appears in Collections:Staff Publications

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