Self-Resistance in the Biosynthesis of Fungal Macrolides Involving Cycles of Extracellular Oxidative Activation and Intracellular Reductive Inactivation.
Yalong ZhangJian BaiLe ZhangChen ZhangBingyu LiuYou-Cai HuPublished in: Angewandte Chemie (International ed. in English) (2021)
Self-resistance genes are employed by many microbial producers of bioactive natural products to avoid self-harm. Herein, we describe a unique strategy for self-resistance toward a macrolide antibiotic, A26771B (1), identified by elucidating its biosynthetic pathway in the fungus Penicillium egyptiacum. A highly reducing polyketide synthase and a trans-acting thioesterase generate the macrolide backbone, and a cytochrome P450 and an acyltransferase, respectively catalyze hydroxylation and succinylation to form the prodrug berkeleylactone E (2). Then, extracellular oxidative activation by a secreted flavin-dependent oxidase forms 1, while intracellular reductive inactivation by a short-chain reductase reforms 2, forming a redox cycle. Our work illustrates a unique redox-mediated resistance mechanism for fungal antibiotics and contributes to the understanding of antibiotic biosynthesis and resistance.