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Control of β-Branching in Kalimantacin Biosynthesis: Application of 13 C NMR to Polyketide Programming.

Paul D WalkerChristopher WilliamsAngus N M WeirLuoyi WangJohn CrosbyPaul R RaceThomas J SimpsonChristine L WillisMatthew P Crump
Published in: Angewandte Chemie (International ed. in English) (2019)
The presence of β-branches in the structure of polyketides that possess potent biological activity underpins the widespread importance of this structural feature. Kalimantacin is a polyketide antibiotic with selective activity against staphylococci, and its biosynthesis involves the unprecedented incorporation of three different and sequential β-branching modifications. We use purified single and multi-domain enzyme components of the kalimantacin biosynthetic machinery to address in vitro how the pattern of β-branching in kalimantacin is controlled. Robust discrimination of enzyme products required the development of a generalisable assay that takes advantage of 13 C NMR of a single 13 C label incorporated into key biosynthetic mimics combined with favourable dynamic properties of an acyl carrier protein. We report a previously unassigned modular enoyl-CoA hydratase (mECH) domain and the assembly of enzyme constructs and cascades that are able to generate each specific β-branch.
Keyphrases
  • magnetic resonance
  • high resolution
  • solid state
  • fatty acid
  • high throughput
  • machine learning
  • cell wall
  • deep learning
  • antimicrobial resistance
  • amino acid
  • small molecule
  • anti inflammatory