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Post Polyketide Synthase Carbon-Carbon Bond Formation in Type-II PKS-Derived Natural Products from Streptomyces venezuelae.

Andrew W RobertsonJeanna M MacLeodLogan W MacIntyreStephanie M ForgetSteven R HallLeah G BennettHebelin CorreaRussell G KerrKerry B GoralskiDavid L Jakeman
Published in: The Journal of organic chemistry (2018)
Polyketide synthase (PKS) derived natural products are biosynthesized by head-to-tail addition of acetate and malonate extender units resulting in linear extended-polyketide chains. Despite the well-documented structural diversity associated with PKS-derived natural products, C-C chain branching deviating from the usual linear pattern is relatively rare. Herein, type-II PKS angucyclic natural products containing a hemiaminal functionality were identified and proposed as the parent of a series of C-C-branched analogues. These C-C linked acetate or pyruvate branching units were located at the α-positions on the extended polyketide chains of jadomycins incorporating 3- and 4-aminomethylbenzoic acids. Labeling studies utilizing [1-13C]-d-glucose provided mechanistic evidence that the C-C bond formation occurred as a result of a previously unidentified post-PKS processing, additional to the enzymes encoded within the biosynthetic gene cluster. Selected compounds were evaluated in cytotoxic or antimicrobial assays.
Keyphrases
  • staphylococcus aureus
  • high throughput
  • type diabetes
  • copy number
  • blood pressure
  • metabolic syndrome
  • skeletal muscle
  • single cell
  • genome wide identification
  • transition metal
  • genome wide analysis