Publication | Open Access
Understanding Substrate Selectivity of Phoslactomycin Polyketide Synthase by Using Reconstituted in Vitro Systems
15
Citations
15
References
2020
Year
Substrate SelectivityEngineeringPhoslactomycin Polyketide SynthaseMolecular BiologyChemical BiologyEnzymatic ModificationPn PksBiosynthesisVitro SystemsBiochemical EngineeringNatural Product BiosynthesisSite-specific SelectivityChemical BiotechnologyBiochemistryBiocatalysisBiomolecular EngineeringNatural SciencesBiotechnologySynthetic BiologyPolyketide SynthasesPathway Engineering
Polyketide synthases (PKSs) use simple extender units to synthesize complex natural products. A fundamental question is how different extender units are site-specifically incorporated into the growing polyketide. Here we established phoslactomycin (Pn) PKS, which incorporates malonyl- and ethylmalonyl-CoA, as an in vitro model to study substrate specificity. We combined up to six Pn PKS modules with different termination sites for the controlled release of tetra-, penta- and hexaketides, and challenged these systems with up to seven different extender units in competitive assays to test for the specificity of Pn modules. While malonyl-CoA modules of Pn PKS exclusively accept their natural substrate, the ethylmalonyl-CoA module PnC tolerates different α-substituted derivatives, but discriminates against malonyl-CoA. We show that the ratio of extender transacylation to hydrolysis controls incorporation in PnC, thus explaining site-specific selectivity and promiscuity in the natural context of Pn PKS.
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