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Thiolation Protein-Based Transfer of Indolyl to a Ribosomally Synthesized Polythiazolyl Peptide Intermediate during the Biosynthesis of the Side-Ring System of Nosiheptide
29
Citations
9
References
2017
Year
EngineeringMolecular BiologyDiscrete Thiolation ProteinPeptide ScienceNosiheptide-type Thiopeptide MembersSide-ring SystemChemical BiologyEnzymatic ModificationProtein SynthesisBiosynthesisPeptide PrecursorThiolation Protein-based TransferNatural Product BiosynthesisStructure-function Enzyme KineticsBiochemistryProtein BiosynthesisNatural SciencesSynthetic BiologyPeptide SynthesisProtein Engineering
Nosiheptide, a potent bicyclic member of the family of thiopeptide antibiotics, possesses a distinctive l-Trp-derived indolyl moiety. The way in which this moiety is incorporated into a ribosomally synthesized and post-translationally modified thiopeptide remains poorly understood. Here, we report that NosK, an α/β-hydrolase fold protein, mediates the transfer of indolyl from NosJ, a discrete thiolation protein, to a linear pentathiazolyl peptide intermediate rather than its genetically encoded untreated precursor. This intermediate results from enzymatic processing of the peptide precursor, in which five of the six l-Cys residues are transformed into thiazoles but Cys4 selectively remains unmodified for indolyl substitution via a thioester exchange. Determining the timing of indolyl incorporation, which expands the chemical space of a thiopeptide framework, facilitates mechanistic access to the unusual logic of post-translational modifications in the biosynthesis of nosiheptide-type thiopeptide members that share a similar compact side-ring system.
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