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Non-Heme Iron Enzymes Catalyze Heterobicyclic and Spirocyclic Isoquinolone Core Formation in Piperazine Alkaloid Biosynthesis.

Mai-Truc PhamFeng-Ling YangI-Chen LiuPo-Huang LiangHsiao-Ching Lin
Published in: Angewandte Chemie (International ed. in English) (2024)
We report the discovery and biosynthesis of new piperazine alkaloids-arizonamides, and their derived compounds-arizolidines, featuring heterobicyclic and spirocyclic isoquinolone skeletons, respectively. Their biosynthetic pathway involves two crucial non-heme iron enzymes, ParF and ParG, for core skeleton construction. ParF has a dual function facilitating 2,3-alkene formation of helvamide, as a substrate for ParG, and oxidative cleavage of piperazine. Notably, ParG exhibits catalytic versatility in multiple oxidative reactions, including cyclization and ring reconstruction. A key amino acid residue Phe67 was characterized to control the formation of the constrained arizonamide B backbone by ParG.
Keyphrases
  • amino acid
  • small molecule
  • high throughput
  • cell wall
  • iron deficiency
  • dna binding
  • transcription factor
  • crystal structure