Affiliation:
1. Department of Chemistry Remsen Hall The Johns Hopkins University 3400 North Charles St. Baltimore MD 21218 USA
Abstract
AbstractThe enediyne antitumor antibiotics have remarkable structures and exhibit potent DNA cleavage properties that have inspired continued interest as cancer therapeutics. Their complex structures and high reactivity, however, pose formidable challenges to their production and development in the clinic. We report here proof‐of‐concept studies using a mutasynthesis strategy to combine chemical synthesis of select modifications to a key iodoanthracene‐γ‐thiolactone intermediate in the biosynthesis of dynemicin A and all other known anthraquinone‐fused enediynes (AFEs). By chemical complementation of a mutant bacterial producer that is incapable of synthesizing this essential building block, we show that derivatives of dynemicin can be prepared substituted in the A‐ring of the anthraquinone motif. In the absence of competition from native production of this intermediate, the most efficient utilization of these externally‐supplied structural analogues for precursor‐directed biosynthesis becomes possible. To achieve this goal, we describe the required Δorf15 blocked mutant and a general synthetic route to a library of iodoanthracene structural variants. Their successful incorporation opens the door to enhancing DNA binding and tuning the bioreductive activation of the modified enediynes for DNA cleavage.
Funder
National Institutes of Health
Subject
Inorganic Chemistry,Organic Chemistry,Physical and Theoretical Chemistry,Drug Discovery,Biochemistry,Catalysis