The goals of this proposal are the study of enzymatic reaction mechanisms. In this project period the focus is on the reaction mechanisms of two kinds of enzyme systems involved in the biosynthesis of peptide antibiotics. The first is the enzymatic heterocyclization machinery involved in the conversion of the 69aa Microcin A protein, an antibiotic precursor, to Microcin B17, an antibiotic targetted against E.coli DNA gyrase, in which 14 residues (six gly, four ser, four cys) have been posttranslationally modified to four thiazole and four oxazole rings, essential for antibiotic activity. The second goal is analysis of the enzymatic strategies used by multimodular enzymes that make peptide bonds nonribosomally, e.g. in the biosynthesis of peptide antibiotics and iron-chelatina siderophores. The example to be studied is the four enzyme system, Ent B,D,E,F, responsible for formation of the E. coli iron chelator enterobactin. In particular the EntF enzyme has four domains (condensation, adenylation, peptidyl carrier protein and thioesterase) whose functions in assembly of the (dihydroxybenzoyl)-serine trilactone, enterobactin, will be analyzed in terms of covalent priming, initiation, elongation, and termination strategies.

Agency
National Institute of Health (NIH)
Institute
National Institute of General Medical Sciences (NIGMS)
Type
Research Project (R01)
Project #
5R01GM020011-32
Application #
6627101
Study Section
Biochemistry Study Section (BIO)
Program Officer
Jones, Warren
Project Start
1987-09-30
Project End
2003-12-31
Budget Start
2003-01-01
Budget End
2003-12-31
Support Year
32
Fiscal Year
2003
Total Cost
$548,315
Indirect Cost
Name
Harvard University
Department
Biochemistry
Type
Schools of Medicine
DUNS #
047006379
City
Boston
State
MA
Country
United States
Zip Code
02115
Tsodikov, Oleg V; Hou, Caixia; Walsh, Christopher T et al. (2015) Crystal structure of O-methyltransferase CalO6 from the calicheamicin biosynthetic pathway: a case of challenging structure determination at low resolution. BMC Struct Biol 15:13
Walsh, Christopher T; Wencewicz, Timothy A (2014) Prospects for new antibiotics: a molecule-centered perspective. J Antibiot (Tokyo) 67:7-22
Setser, Jeremy W; Heemstra Jr, John R; Walsh, Christopher T et al. (2014) Crystallographic evidence of drastic conformational changes in the active site of a flavin-dependent N-hydroxylase. Biochemistry 53:6063-77
Walsh, Christopher T; Haynes, Stuart W; Ames, Brian D et al. (2013) Short pathways to complexity generation: fungal peptidyl alkaloid multicyclic scaffolds from anthranilate building blocks. ACS Chem Biol 8:1366-82
Haynes, Stuart W; Gao, Xue; Tang, Yi et al. (2013) Complexity generation in fungal peptidyl alkaloid biosynthesis: a two-enzyme pathway to the hexacyclic MDR export pump inhibitor ardeemin. ACS Chem Biol 8:741-8
Gao, Xue; Jiang, Wei; Jiménez-Osés, Gonzalo et al. (2013) An iterative, bimodular nonribosomal peptide synthetase that converts anthranilate and tryptophan into tetracyclic asperlicins. Chem Biol 20:870-8
Walsh, Christopher T; O'Brien, Robert V; Khosla, Chaitan (2013) Nonproteinogenic amino acid building blocks for nonribosomal peptide and hybrid polyketide scaffolds. Angew Chem Int Ed Engl 52:7098-124
Parker, Jared B; Walsh, Christopher T (2013) Action and timing of BacC and BacD in the late stages of biosynthesis of the dipeptide antibiotic bacilysin. Biochemistry 52:889-901
Malcolmson, Steven J; Young, Travis S; Ruby, J Graham et al. (2013) The posttranslational modification cascade to the thiopeptide berninamycin generates linear forms and altered macrocyclic scaffolds. Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A 110:8483-8
Walsh, Christopher T; Wencewicz, Timothy A (2013) Flavoenzymes: versatile catalysts in biosynthetic pathways. Nat Prod Rep 30:175-200

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