| Title : Epimerization and substrate gating by a TE domain in beta-lactam antibiotic biosynthesis - Gaudelli_2014_Nat.Chem.Biol_10_251 |
| Author(s) : Gaudelli NM , Townsend CA |
| Ref : Nat Chemical Biology , 10 :251 , 2014 |
|
Abstract :
Nonribosomal peptide synthetases are versatile engines of bioactive natural product biosynthesis that function according to the multiple carrier thiotemplate mechanism. C-terminal thioesterase (TE) domains of these giant modular proteins typically catalyze product release by hydrolysis or macrocyclization. We now report an unprecedented, dual-function TE that is involved in the biosynthesis of nocardicin A, which is the paradigm monocyclic beta-lactam antibiotic. Contrary to our expectation, a stereodefined series of potential peptide substrates for the nocardicin TE domain failed to undergo hydrolysis. The stringent discrimination against peptide intermediates was overcome by prior monocyclic beta-lactam formation at an L-seryl site. Kinetic data are interpreted such that the TE domain acts as a gatekeeper to hold the assembling peptide on an upstream domain until beta-lactam formation takes place and then rapidly catalyzes epimerization, which has not been observed previously as a TE catalytic function, and thioesterase cleavage to discharge a fully fledged pentapeptide beta-lactam harboring nocardicin G, the universal precursor of the nocardicins. |
| PubMedSearch : Gaudelli_2014_Nat.Chem.Biol_10_251 |
| PubMedID: 24531841 |
| Gene_locus related to this paper: 9noca-q5j1q6 |
| Gene_locus | 9noca-q5j1q6 |
Gaudelli NM, Townsend CA (2014)
Epimerization and substrate gating by a TE domain in beta-lactam antibiotic biosynthesis
Nat Chemical Biology
10 :251
Gaudelli NM, Townsend CA (2014)
Nat Chemical Biology
10 :251