Kittendorf_2007_Chem.Biol_14_944

Reference

Title : Interrogating the molecular basis for multiple macrolactone ring formation by the pikromycin polyketide synthase - Kittendorf_2007_Chem.Biol_14_944
Author(s) : Kittendorf JD , Beck BJ , Buchholz TJ , Seufert W , Sherman DH
Ref : Chemical Biology , 14 :944 , 2007
Abstract :

The pikromycin polyketide synthase (PKS) is unique in its ability to generate both 12 and 14 membered ring macrolactones. As such, dissection of the molecular basis for controlling metabolic diversity in this system remains an important objective for understanding modular PKS function and expanding chemical diversity. Here, we describe a series of experiments designed to probe the importance of the protein-protein interaction that occurs between the final two monomodules, PikAIII (module 5) and PikAIV (module 6), for the production of the 12 membered ring macrolactone 10-deoxymethynolide. The results obtained from these in vitro studies demonstrate that PikAIII and PikAIV generate the 12 membered ring macrocycle most efficiently when engaged in their native protein-protein interaction. Accordingly, the data are consistent with PikAIV adopting an alternative conformation that enables the terminal thioesterase domain to directly off-load the PikAIII-bound hexaketide intermediate for macrocyclization.

PubMedSearch : Kittendorf_2007_Chem.Biol_14_944
PubMedID: 17719493
Gene_locus related to this paper: strve-PIKAIV

Related information

Gene_locus strve-PIKAIV

Citations formats

Kittendorf JD, Beck BJ, Buchholz TJ, Seufert W, Sherman DH (2007)
Interrogating the molecular basis for multiple macrolactone ring formation by the pikromycin polyketide synthase
Chemical Biology 14 :944

Kittendorf JD, Beck BJ, Buchholz TJ, Seufert W, Sherman DH (2007)
Chemical Biology 14 :944