This application responds to an RFA for approaches to new natural products and the new natural products themselves that would increase the biologically relevant molecular diversity in the NIH Molecular Libraries Roadmap and other screening initiatives. Two approaches form the application's two Specific Aims. Both emphasize a genetic starting point for discovering new natural products from bacterial sources.
Specific Aim 1 focuses on Gammaproteobacteria, and Specific Aim 2 focuses on actinomycetes. Bacterial sources are emphasized because of their past contributions, recent studies that show their potential has been only poorly explored, their genetic accessibility, and their ability to be cultured and provide the multimilligram amounts of material needed for screening programs. The two aims not only use very different groups of bacteria, they also use different starting points, uncharacterized genomic DNA and genome sequences, to discover bioactive small molecules.
Specific Aim 1. Discover biologically active small molecules through gene-to- molecule approaches. The first approach utilizes cosmid libraries from genomic DNA of Photorhabdus spp. and Xenorhabdus spp., heterologous expression in the metabolically compatible host Escherichia coli, and a functional assay for antibiotic activity, which serves as a surrogate assay for many other activities. Both genera, Photorhabdus and Xenorhabdus, are likely to produce large numbers of antibiotic molecules, and their close relationship to the heterologous host, E. coli, facilitates high levels of expression of the small molecules in this DNA library approach.
Specific Aim 2. Develop sequence-based approaches to discovering natural products from 20 new actinomycete genomes. The largely function-based approach of Specific Aim 1 will be complemented by a sequence-based approach that leverages ongoing efforts to sequence and annotate the secondary biosynthetic pathways of 20 actinomycete strains in Specific Aim 2.
This aim uses `knockout scanning' to identify small molecules associated with predicted gene clusters. For strains refractory to genetic manipulation, heterologous expression in appropriate hosts will be used. ? ?

Public Health Relevance

High-throughput screening (HTS), the testing of large numbers of small molecules in biological assays, is the major tool for discovering new drugs, and the quality of the small molecule libraries largely determines the success of the HTS approach. Natural products, the small molecules produced by many living organisms, contain truly remarkable levels of molecular diversity and have a long history of success in discovering new drugs. But in spite of this history, they play only a minimal role in today's HTS world. This project describes two approaches, which minimize some of the liabilities of traditional natural products discovery techniques that could lead to an important small molecule stream for HTS. ? ? ?

Agency
National Institute of Health (NIH)
Institute
National Institute of General Medical Sciences (NIGMS)
Type
Research Project (R01)
Project #
1R01GM086258-01
Application #
7559105
Study Section
Special Emphasis Panel (ZRG1-BCMB-H (50))
Program Officer
Schwab, John M
Project Start
2008-09-09
Project End
2012-06-30
Budget Start
2008-09-09
Budget End
2009-06-30
Support Year
1
Fiscal Year
2008
Total Cost
$405,438
Indirect Cost
Name
Harvard University
Department
Biochemistry
Type
Schools of Medicine
DUNS #
047006379
City
Boston
State
MA
Country
United States
Zip Code
02115
Böttcher, Thomas; Szamosvári, Dávid; Clardy, Jon (2018) A Repeating Sulfated Galactan Motif Resuscitates Dormant Micrococcus luteus Bacteria. Appl Environ Microbiol 84:
Spady, Emma S; Wyche, Thomas P; Rollins, Nathanael J et al. (2018) Mammalian Cells Engineered To Produce New Steroids. Chembiochem 19:1827-1833
Beemelmanns, Christine; Ramadhar, Timothy R; Kim, Ki Hyun et al. (2017) Macrotermycins A-D, Glycosylated Macrolactams from a Termite-Associated Amycolatopsis sp. M39. Org Lett 19:1000-1003
Liu, Yizhou; Saurí, Josep; Mevers, Emily et al. (2017) Unequivocal determination of complex molecular structures using anisotropic NMR measurements. Science 356:
Guo, Huijuan; Rischer, Maja; Sperfeld, Martin et al. (2017) Natural products and morphogenic activity of ?-Proteobacteria associated with the marine hydroid polyp Hydractinia echinata. Bioorg Med Chem 25:6088-6097
Wyche, Thomas P; Ruzzini, Antonio C; Beemelmanns, Christine et al. (2017) Linear Peptides Are the Major Products of a Biosynthetic Pathway That Encodes for Cyclic Depsipeptides. Org Lett 19:1772-1775
Brancucci, Nicolas M B; Gerdt, Joseph P; Wang, ChengQi et al. (2017) Lysophosphatidylcholine Regulates Sexual Stage Differentiation in the Human Malaria Parasite Plasmodium falciparum. Cell 171:1532-1544.e15
Wyche, Thomas P; Ruzzini, Antonio C; Schwab, Laura et al. (2017) Tryptorubin A: A Polycyclic Peptide from a Fungus-Derived Streptomycete. J Am Chem Soc 139:12899-12902
Rischer, Maja; Klassen, Jonathan L; Wolf, Thomas et al. (2016) Draft Genome Sequence of Shewanella sp. Strain P1-14-1, a Bacterial Inducer of Settlement and Morphogenesis in Larvae of the Marine Hydroid Hydractinia echinata. Genome Announc 4:
Böttcher, Thomas; Elliott, Hunter L; Clardy, Jon (2016) Dynamics of Snake-like Swarming Behavior of Vibrio alginolyticus. Biophys J 110:981-92

Showing the most recent 10 out of 67 publications