Gehret_2011_J.Biol.Chem_286_14445

Reference

Title : Terminal alkene formation by the thioesterase of curacin A biosynthesis: structure of a decarboxylating thioesterase - Gehret_2011_J.Biol.Chem_286_14445
Author(s) : Gehret JJ , Gu L , Gerwick WH , Wipf P , Sherman DH , Smith JL
Ref : Journal of Biological Chemistry , 286 :14445 , 2011
Abstract :

Curacin A is a polyketide synthase (PKS)-non-ribosomal peptide synthetase-derived natural product with potent anticancer properties generated by the marine cyanobacterium Lyngbya majuscula. Type I modular PKS assembly lines typically employ a thioesterase (TE) domain to off-load carboxylic acid or macrolactone products from an adjacent acyl carrier protein (ACP) domain. In a striking departure from this scheme the curacin A PKS employs tandem sulfotransferase and TE domains to form a terminal alkene moiety. Sulfotransferase sulfonation of beta-hydroxy-acyl-ACP is followed by TE hydrolysis, decarboxylation, and sulfate elimination (Gu, L., Wang, B., Kulkarni, A., Gehret, J. J., Lloyd, K. R., Gerwick, L., Gerwick, W. H., Wipf, P., Hakansson, K., Smith, J. L., and Sherman, D. H. (2009) J. Am. Chem. Soc. 131, 16033-16035). With low sequence identity to other PKS TEs (<15%), the curacin TE represents a new thioesterase subfamily. The 1.7-A curacin TE crystal structure reveals how the familiar alpha/beta-hydrolase architecture is adapted to specificity for beta-sulfated substrates. A Ser-His-Glu catalytic triad is centered in an open active site cleft between the core domain and a lid subdomain. Unlike TEs from other PKSs, the lid is fixed in an open conformation on one side by dimer contacts of a protruding helix and on the other side by an arginine anchor from the lid into the core. Adjacent to the catalytic triad, another arginine residue is positioned to recognize the substrate beta-sulfate group. The essential features of the curacin TE are conserved in sequences of five other putative bacterial ACP-ST-TE tridomains. Formation of a sulfate leaving group as a biosynthetic strategy to facilitate acyl chain decarboxylation is of potential value as a route to hydrocarbon biofuels.

PubMedSearch : Gehret_2011_J.Biol.Chem_286_14445
PubMedID: 21357626
Gene_locus related to this paper: 9cyan-d0e8e2

Related information

Gene_locus 9cyan-d0e8e2
Structure 9cyan-d0e8e2    3QIT

Citations formats

Gehret JJ, Gu L, Gerwick WH, Wipf P, Sherman DH, Smith JL (2011)
Terminal alkene formation by the thioesterase of curacin A biosynthesis: structure of a decarboxylating thioesterase
Journal of Biological Chemistry 286 :14445

Gehret JJ, Gu L, Gerwick WH, Wipf P, Sherman DH, Smith JL (2011)
Journal of Biological Chemistry 286 :14445