Concepedia

Publication | Open Access

4‐<scp>H</scp>ydroxybenzoic acid is a diffusible factor that connects metabolic shikimate pathway to the biosynthesis of a unique antifungal metabolite in <scp><i>L</i></scp><i>ysobacter enzymogenes</i>

47

Citations

30

References

2017

Year

Abstract

Heat-stable antifungal factor (HSAF) produced by Lysobacter enzymogenes is a potential lead compound for developing new antibiotics. Yet, how L. enzymogenes regulates the HSAF biosynthesis remains largely unknown. Here, we show that 4-hydroxybenzoic acid (4-HBA) serves as a diffusible factor for regulating HSAF biosynthesis. The biosynthesis of 4-HBA involved an oxygenase, LenB2, and mutation of lenB2 almost completely abolished 4-HBA production, leading to significantly impaired HSAF production. Introduction of a heterologous gene coding for 4-HBA biosynthetic enzyme into the lenB2 mutant restored the production of 4-HBA and HSAF to their corresponding wild-type levels. Exogenous addition of 0.5-1 μM 4-HBA was sufficient to restore HSAF production in the lenB2 mutant. Furthermore, the shikimate pathway was found to regulate the biosynthesis of HSAF via 4-HBA. Finally, we identified a LysR-family transcription factor (LysR<sub>Le</sub> ) with activity directed to HSAF production. LysR<sub>Le</sub> could bind to the HSAF promoter and, as a result, regulates expression of HSAF biosynthesis genes. The 4-HBA could bind to LysR<sub>Le</sub> and appeared to partly enhance formation of the LysR<sub>Le</sub> -DNA complex<sub>.</sub> Collectively, our findings suggest that L. enzymogenes produces 4-HBA to serve as an adaptor molecule to link the shikimate pathway to the biosynthesis of a unique antifungal metabolite (HSAF).

References

YearCitations

1995

3.3K

1998

2K

2010

1.1K

1997

495

1978

416

2006

266

2010

219

2006

217

2004

146

1999

125

Page 1