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Genome-based discovery and total synthesis of janustatins, potent cytotoxins from a plant-associated bacterium.

Reiko UeokaPhilipp SondermannStefan Leopold-MesserYizhou LiuRei SuoAgneya BhushanLida VadakumcheryUte GreczmielYoko YashirodaHiromi KimuraShinichi NishimuraYojiro HoshikawaMinoru YoshidaAnnette OxeniusShigeki MatsunagaR Thomas WilliamsonErick M CarreiraJörn Piel
Published in: Nature chemistry (2022)
Host-associated bacteria are increasingly being recognized as underexplored sources of bioactive natural products with unprecedented chemical scaffolds. A recently identified example is the plant-root-associated marine bacterium Gynuella sunshinyii of the chemically underexplored order Oceanospirillales. Its genome contains at least 22 biosynthetic gene clusters, suggesting a rich and mostly uncharacterized specialized metabolism. Here, in silico chemical prediction of a non-canonical polyketide synthase cluster has led to the discovery of janustatins, structurally unprecedented polyketide alkaloids with potent cytotoxicity that are produced in minute quantities. A combination of MS and two-dimensional NMR experiments, density functional theory calculations of 13 C chemical shifts and semiquantitative interpretation of transverse rotating-frame Overhauser effect spectroscopy data were conducted to determine the relative configuration, which enabled the total synthesis of both enantiomers and assignment of the absolute configuration. Janustatins feature a previously unknown pyridodihydropyranone heterocycle and an unusual biological activity consisting of delayed, synchronized cell death at subnanomolar concentrations.
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