The Structure of Cyclodecatriene Collinolactone, its Biosynthesis, and Semisynthetic Analogues: Effects of Monoastral Phenotype and Protection from Intracellular Oxidative Stress.
Julian C SchmidKerstin FreyMatthias ScheinerJaime Felipe Guerrero GarzónLuise StafforstJan-Niklas FrickeMichaela SchuppeHajo SchieweAxel ZeeckTilmann WeberIsabel UsónRalf KemkemerMichael DeckerStephanie GrondPublished in: Angewandte Chemie (International ed. in English) (2021)
Recently described rhizolutin and collinolactone isolated from Streptomyces Gö 40/10 share the same novel carbon scaffold. Analyses by NMR and X-Ray crystallography verify the structure of collinolactone and propose a revision of rhizolutin's stereochemistry. Isotope-labeled precursor feeding shows that collinolactone is biosynthesized via type I polyketide synthase with Baeyer-Villiger oxidation. CRISPR-based genetic strategies led to the identification of the biosynthetic gene cluster and a high-production strain. Chemical semisyntheses yielded collinolactone analogues with inhibitory effects on L929 cell line. Fluorescence microscopy revealed that only particular analogues induce monopolar spindles impairing cell division in mitosis. Inspired by the Alzheimer-protective activity of rhizolutin, we investigated the neuroprotective effects of collinolactone and its analogues on glutamate-sensitive cells (HT22) and indeed, natural collinolactone displays distinct neuroprotection from intracellular oxidative stress.
Keyphrases
- oxidative stress
- molecular docking
- induced apoptosis
- high resolution
- genome wide
- structure activity relationship
- single molecule
- single cell
- dna damage
- copy number
- total knee arthroplasty
- magnetic resonance
- reactive oxygen species
- ischemia reperfusion injury
- cell cycle arrest
- stem cells
- cell therapy
- cognitive decline
- high throughput
- cerebral ischemia
- gene expression
- nitric oxide
- computed tomography
- total hip arthroplasty
- atomic force microscopy
- hydrogen peroxide
- mass spectrometry
- mesenchymal stem cells
- transcription factor
- magnetic resonance imaging
- cell wall