Pyridoxal-5′-phosphate-dependent alkyl transfer in nucleoside antibiotic biosynthesis

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作者
Zheng Cui
Jonathan Overbay
Xiachang Wang
Xiaodong Liu
Yinan Zhang
Minakshi Bhardwaj
Anke Lemke
Daniel Wiegmann
Giuliana Niro
Jon S. Thorson
Christian Ducho
Steven G. Van Lanen
机构
[1] University of Kentucky,Department of Pharmaceutical Sciences, College of Pharmacy
[2] University of Kentucky,Center for Pharmaceutical Research and Innovation, College of Pharmacy
[3] Nanjing University of Chinese Medicine,Jiangsu Key Laboratory for Functional Substance of Chinese Medicine, School of Pharmacy
[4] Saarland University,Department of Pharmacy, Pharmaceutical and Medicinal Chemistry
来源
Nature Chemical Biology | 2020年 / 16卷
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摘要
Several nucleoside antibiotics are structurally characterized by a 5″-amino-5″-deoxyribose (ADR) appended via a glycosidic bond to a high-carbon sugar nucleoside (5′S,6′S)-5′-C-glycyluridine (GlyU). GlyU is further modified with an N-alkylamine linker, the biosynthetic origin of which has yet to be established. By using a combination of feeding experiments with isotopically labeled precursors and characterization of recombinant proteins from multiple pathways, the biosynthetic mechanism for N-alkylamine installation for ADR–GlyU-containing nucleoside antibiotics has been uncovered. The data reveal S-adenosyl-l-methionine (AdoMet) as the direct precursor of the N-alkylamine, but, unlike conventional AdoMet- or decarboxylated AdoMet-dependent alkyltransferases, the reaction is catalyzed by a pyridoxal-5′-phosphate-dependent aminobutyryltransferase (ABTase) using a stepwise γ-replacement mechanism that couples γ-elimination of AdoMet with aza-γ-addition onto the disaccharide alkyl acceptor. In addition to using a conceptually different strategy for AdoMet-dependent alkylation, the newly discovered ABTases require a phosphorylated disaccharide alkyl acceptor, revealing a cryptic intermediate in the biosynthetic pathway.
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页码:904 / 911
页数:7
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