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Synthesis of Gamma-Butyrolactone Hormones Enables Understanding of Natural Product Induction.

Lauren E WilbanksHaylie E HenniganChristina D Martinez-BrokawHani LakkisSarah ThormannAlyssa S EgglyGrace BuechelElizabeth I Parkinson
Published in: ACS chemical biology (2023)
Bacteria produce natural products (NPs) via biosynthetic gene clusters. Unfortunately, many biosynthetic gene clusters are silent under traditional laboratory conditions. To access novel NPs, a better understanding of their regulation is needed. γ-Butyrolactones, including the A-factor and Streptomyces coelicolor butanolides, SCBs, are a major class of Streptomyces ' hormones. Study of these hormones has been limited due to challenges in accessing them in stereochemically pure forms. Herein, we describe an efficient route to ( R )-paraconyl alcohol, a key intermediate for these molecules, as well as a biocatalytic method to access the exocyclic hydroxyl group that differentiates A-factor-type from SCB-type hormones. Utilizing these methods, a library of hormones have been synthesized and tested in a green fluorescent protein reporter assay for their ability to relieve repression by the repressor ScbR. This allowed the most quantitative structure-activity relationship of γ-butyrolactones and a cognate repressor to date. Bioinformatics analysis strongly suggests that many other repressors of NP biosynthesis likely bind similar molecules. This efficient, diversifiable synthesis will enable further investigation of the regulation of NP biosynthesis.
Keyphrases
  • structure activity relationship
  • genome wide
  • high resolution
  • crispr cas
  • oxidative stress
  • amino acid
  • genome wide identification
  • living cells
  • mass spectrometry
  • alcohol consumption
  • genome wide analysis