Discovery and biosynthesis of karnamicins as angiotensin converting enzyme inhibitors

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Abstract

Angiotensin-converting enzyme inhibitors are widely used for treatment of hypertension and related diseases. Here, six karnamicins E1-E6 (1–6), which bear fully substituted hydroxypyridine and thiazole moieties are characterized from the rare actinobacterium Lechevalieria rhizosphaerae NEAU-A2. Through a combination of isotopic labeling, genome mining, and enzymatic characterization studies, the programmed assembly of the fully substituted hydroxypyridine moiety in karnamicin is proposed to be due to sequential operation of a hybrid polyketide synthase-nonribosomal peptide synthetase, two regioselective pyridine ring flavoprotein hydroxylases, and a methyltransferase. Based on AlphaFold protein structures predictions, molecular docking, and site-directed mutagenesis, we find that two pyridine hydroxylases deploy active site residues distinct from other flavoprotein monooxygenases to direct the chemo- and regioselective hydroxylation of the pyridine nucleus. Pleasingly, karnamicins show significant angiotensin-converting enzyme inhibitory activity with IC50 values ranging from 0.24 to 5.81 μM, suggesting their potential use for the treatment of hypertension and related diseases.

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Yu, Z., Huang, J. P., Yang, J., Liu, C., Yan, Y., Wang, L., … Huang, S. X. (2023). Discovery and biosynthesis of karnamicins as angiotensin converting enzyme inhibitors. Nature Communications, 14(1). https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-023-35829-1

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