Giraldes_2006_Nat.Chem.Biol_2_531

Reference

Title : Structural and mechanistic insights into polyketide macrolactonization from polyketide-based affinity labels - Giraldes_2006_Nat.Chem.Biol_2_531
Author(s) : Giraldes JW , Akey DL , Kittendorf JD , Sherman DH , Smith JL , Fecik RA
Ref : Nat Chemical Biology , 2 :531 , 2006
Abstract :

Polyketides are a diverse class of natural products having important clinical properties, including antibiotic, immunosuppressive and anticancer activities. They are biosynthesized by polyketide synthases (PKSs), which are modular, multienzyme complexes that sequentially condense simple carboxylic acid derivatives. The final reaction in many PKSs involves thioesterase-catalyzed cyclization of linear chain elongation intermediates. As the substrate in PKSs is presented by a tethered acyl carrier protein, introduction of substrate by diffusion is problematic, and no substrate-bound type I PKS domain structure has been reported so far. We describe the chemical synthesis of polyketide-based affinity labels that covalently modify the active site serine of excised pikromycin thioesterase from Streptomyces venezuelae. Crystal structures reported here of the affinity label-pikromycin thioesterase adducts provide important mechanistic insights. These results suggest that affinity labels can be valuable tools for understanding the mechanisms of individual steps within multifunctional PKSs and for directing rational engineering of PKS domains for combinatorial biosynthesis.

PubMedSearch : Giraldes_2006_Nat.Chem.Biol_2_531
PubMedID: 16969373
Gene_locus related to this paper: strve-PIKAIV

Related information

Inhibitor PSX    PSK
Gene_locus strve-PIKAIV
Family Thioesterase
Structure 2H7X    2H7Y

Citations formats

Giraldes JW, Akey DL, Kittendorf JD, Sherman DH, Smith JL, Fecik RA (2006)
Structural and mechanistic insights into polyketide macrolactonization from polyketide-based affinity labels
Nat Chemical Biology 2 :531

Giraldes JW, Akey DL, Kittendorf JD, Sherman DH, Smith JL, Fecik RA (2006)
Nat Chemical Biology 2 :531