Recombinatorial biosynthesis of polyketides

Author:

Starcevic Antonio1,Wolf Kerstin2,Diminic Janko1,Zucko Jurica1,Ruzic Ida Trninic13,Long Paul F4,Hranueli Daslav1,Cullum John2

Affiliation:

1. grid.4808.4 0000000106574636 Faculty of Food Technology and Biotechnology University of Zagreb Pierottijeva 6 10000 Zagreb Croatia

2. grid.7645.0 0000000121550333 Department of Genetics University of Kaiserslautern Postfach 3049 67653 Kaiserslautern Germany

3. Novalis d.o.o. Božidara Adžije 17 10000 Zagreb Croatia

4. grid.13097.3c 0000000123226764 Institute of Pharmaceutical Science King’s College London Franklin–Wilkins Building, Stamford Street SE1 9NH London UK

Abstract

Abstract Modular polyketide synthases (PKSs) from Streptomyces and related genera of bacteria produce many important pharmaceuticals. A program called CompGen was developed to carry out in silico homologous recombination between gene clusters encoding PKSs and determine whether recombinants have cluster architectures compatible with the production of polyketides. The chemical structure of recombinant polyketides was also predicted. In silico recombination was carried out for 47 well-characterised clusters. The predicted recombinants would produce 11,796 different polyketide structures. The molecular weights and average degree of reduction of the chemical structures are dispersed around the parental structures indicating that they are likely to include pharmaceutically interesting compounds. The details of the recombinants and the chemical structures were entered in a database called r-CSDB. The virtual compound library is a useful resource for computer-aided drug design and chemoinformatics strategies for finding pharmaceutically relevant chemical entities. A strategy to construct recombinant Streptomyces strains to produce these polyketides is described and the critical steps of mobilizing large biosynthetic clusters and producing new linear cloning vectors are illustrated by experimental data.

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Applied Microbiology and Biotechnology,Biotechnology,Bioengineering

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