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Probing Selectivity and Creating Structural Diversity Through Hybrid Polyketide Synthases.

Aaron A KochJennifer J SchmidtAndrew N LowellDouglas A HansenKatherine M CoburnJoseph A ChemlerDavid H Sherman
Published in: Angewandte Chemie (International ed. in English) (2020)
Engineering polyketide synthases (PKS) to produce new metabolites requires an understanding of catalytic points of failure during substrate processing. Growing evidence indicates the thioesterase (TE) domain as a significant bottleneck within engineered PKS systems. We created a series of hybrid PKS modules bearing exchanged TE domains from heterologous pathways and challenged them with both native and non-native polyketide substrates. Reactions pairing wildtype PKS modules with non-native substrates primarily resulted in poor conversions to anticipated macrolactones. Likewise, product formation with native substrates and hybrid PKS modules bearing non-cognate TE domains was severely reduced. In contrast, non-native substrates were converted by most hybrid modules containing a substrate compatible TE, directly implicating this domain as the major catalytic gatekeeper and highlighting its value as a target for protein engineering to improve analog production in PKS pathways.
Keyphrases
  • network analysis
  • magnetic resonance
  • magnetic resonance imaging
  • amino acid
  • heat stress