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Use of a scaffold peptide in the biosynthesis of amino acid-derived natural products.

Chi P TingMichael A FunkSteve L HalabyZhengan ZhangTamir GonenWilfred A van der Donk
Published in: Science (New York, N.Y.) (2020)
Genome sequencing of environmental bacteria allows identification of biosynthetic gene clusters encoding unusual combinations of enzymes that produce unknown natural products. We identified a pathway in which a ribosomally synthesized small peptide serves as a scaffold for nonribosomal peptide extension and chemical modification. Amino acids are transferred to the carboxyl terminus of the peptide through adenosine triphosphate and amino acyl-tRNA-dependent chemistry that is independent of the ribosome. Oxidative rearrangement, carboxymethylation, and proteolysis of a terminal cysteine yields an amino acid-derived small molecule. Microcrystal electron diffraction demonstrates that the resulting product is isosteric to glutamate. We show that a similar peptide extension is used during the biosynthesis of the ammosamides, which are cytotoxic pyrroloquinoline alkaloids. These results suggest an alternative paradigm for biosynthesis of amino acid-derived natural products.
Keyphrases
  • amino acid
  • small molecule
  • genome wide
  • cell wall
  • single cell
  • tissue engineering
  • protein protein
  • risk assessment
  • crystal structure
  • living cells
  • single molecule
  • electron microscopy
  • bioinformatics analysis