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Uncovering biosynthetic relationships between antifungal nonadrides and octadrides.

Kate M J de Mattos-ShipleyCatherine E SpencerClaudio GrecoDavid M HeardDaniel E O'FlynnTrong T DaoZhongshu SongNicholas P MulhollandJason L VincentThomas J SimpsonRussell J CoxAndrew M BaileyChristine L Willis
Published in: Chemical science (2020)
Maleidrides are a class of bioactive secondary metabolites unique to filamentous fungi, which contain one or more maleic anhydrides fused to a 7-, 8- or 9- membered carbocycle (named heptadrides, octadrides and nonadrides respectively). Herein structural and biosynthetic studies on the antifungal octadride, zopfiellin, and nonadrides scytalidin, deoxyscytalidin and castaneiolide are described. A combination of genome sequencing, bioinformatic analyses, gene disruptions, biotransformations, isotopic feeding studies, NMR and X-ray crystallography revealed that they share a common biosynthetic pathway, diverging only after the nonadride deoxyscytalidin. 5-Hydroxylation of deoxyscytalidin occurs prior to ring contraction in the zopfiellin pathway of Diffractella curvata. In Scytalidium album, 6-hydroxylation - confirmed as being catalysed by the α-ketoglutarate dependent oxidoreductase ScyL2 - converts deoxyscytalidin to scytalidin, in the final step in the scytalidin pathway. Feeding scytalidin to a zopfiellin PKS knockout strain led to the production of the nonadride castaneiolide and two novel ring-open maleidrides.
Keyphrases
  • high resolution
  • candida albicans
  • single cell
  • genome wide
  • magnetic resonance
  • ms ms
  • copy number
  • dna methylation
  • magnetic resonance imaging
  • computed tomography
  • mass spectrometry
  • smooth muscle
  • transcription factor