Publication | Open Access
The biosynthetic gene cluster for the polyketide immunosuppressant rapamycin.
447
Citations
25
References
1995
Year
Systems BiologyBiosynthesisEngineeringCellular EnzymologyNatural SciencesRapamycin BiosynthesisSynthetic BiologyMolecular BiologyMacrocyclic Polyketides RapamycinNatural Product BiosynthesisPolyketide Immunosuppressant RapamycinImmunosuppressionAdjacent GeneChemical BiologyPathway EngineeringGene ExpressionProtein Biosynthesis
The macrocyclic polyketides rapamycin and FK506 are potent immunosuppressants that prevent T-cell proliferation through specific binding to intracellular protein receptors (immunophilins). The cloning and specific alteration of the biosynthetic genes for these polyketides might allow the biosynthesis of clinically valuable analogues. We report here that three clustered polyketide synthase genes responsible for rapamycin biosynthesis in Streptomyces hygroscopicus together encode 14 homologous sets of enzyme activities (modules), each catalyzing a specific round of chain elongation. An adjacent gene encodes a pipecolate-incorporating enzyme, which completes the macrocycle. The total of 70 constituent active sites makes this the most complex multienzyme system identified so far. The DNA region sequenced (107.3 kbp) contains 24 additional open reading frames, some of which code for proteins governing other key steps in rapamycin biosynthesis.
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