Fine Tuning of Antibiotic Activity by a Tailoring Hydroxylase in a Trans-AT Polyketide Synthase Pathway

4Citations
Citations of this article
13Readers
Mendeley users who have this article in their library.
Get full text

Abstract

The addition or removal of hydroxy groups modulates the activity of many pharmacologically active biomolecules. It can be integral to the basic biosynthetic factory or result from associated tailoring steps. For the anti-MRSA antibiotic mupirocin, removal of a C8-hydroxy group late in the biosynthetic pathway gives the active pseudomonic acid A. An extra hydroxylation, at C4, occurs in the related but more potent antibiotic thiomarinol A. We report here in vivo and in vitro studies that show that the putative non-haem-iron(II)/α-ketoglutaratedependent dioxygenase TmuB, from the thiomarinol cluster, 4-hydroxylates various pseudomonic acids whereas C8-OH, and other substituents around the tetrahydropyran ring, block enzyme action but not substrate binding. Molecular modelling suggested a basis for selectivity, but mutation studies had a limited ability to rationally modify TmuB substrate specificity. 4-Hydroxylation had opposite effects on the potency of mupirocin and thiomarinol. Thus, TmuB can be added to the toolbox of polyketide tailoring technologies for the in vivo generation of new antibiotics in the future.

Cite

CITATION STYLE

APA

Mohammad, H. H., Connolly, J. A., Song, Z., Hothersall, J., Race, P. R., Willis, C. L., … Thomas, C. M. (2018). Fine Tuning of Antibiotic Activity by a Tailoring Hydroxylase in a Trans-AT Polyketide Synthase Pathway. ChemBioChem, 19(8), 836–841. https://doi.org/10.1002/cbic.201800036

Register to see more suggestions

Mendeley helps you to discover research relevant for your work.

Already have an account?

Save time finding and organizing research with Mendeley

Sign up for free