Glycosylation Steps during Spiramycin Biosynthesis in Streptomyces ambofaciens : Involvement of Three Glycosyltransferases and Their Interplay with Two Auxiliary Proteins

Author:

Nguyen Hoang Chuong12,Karray Fatma1,Lautru Sylvie1,Gagnat Josette1,Lebrihi Ahmed3,Ho Huynh Thuy Duong2,Pernodet Jean-Luc1

Affiliation:

1. Université Paris-Sud 11, CNRS, UMR 8621, Institut de Génétique et Microbiologie, 91405 Orsay Cedex, France

2. University of Science, Vietnam National University at Ho Chi Minh City, 227 Nguyen Van Cu Street, District 5, Ho Chi Minh City, Vietnam

3. Université de Toulouse, Laboratoire de Génie Chimique UMR 5503 (CNRS/INPT/UPS), ENSAT-INP de Toulouse, 1 Avenue de l'Agrobiopôle, Castanet-Tolosan Cedex, France

Abstract

ABSTRACT Streptomyces ambofaciens synthesizes spiramycin, a 16-membered macrolide antibiotic used in human medicine. The spiramycin molecule consists of a polyketide lactone ring (platenolide) synthesized by a type I polyketide synthase, to which three deoxyhexoses (mycaminose, forosamine, and mycarose) are attached successively in this order. These sugars are essential to the antibacterial activity of spiramycin. We previously identified four genes in the spiramycin biosynthetic gene cluster predicted to encode glycosyltransferases. We individually deleted each of these four genes and showed that three of them were required for spiramycin biosynthesis. The role of each of the three glycosyltransferases in spiramycin biosynthesis was determined by identifying the biosynthetic intermediates accumulated by the corresponding mutant strains. This led to the identification of the glycosyltransferase responsible for the attachment of each of the three sugars. Moreover, two genes encoding putative glycosyltransferase auxiliary proteins were also identified in the spiramycin biosynthetic gene cluster. When these two genes were deleted, one of them was found to be dispensable for spiramycin biosynthesis. However, analysis of the biosynthetic intermediates accumulated by mutant strains devoid of each of the auxiliary proteins (or of both of them), together with complementation experiments, revealed the interplay of glycosyltransferases with the auxiliary proteins. One of the auxiliary proteins interacted efficiently with the two glycosyltransferases transferring mycaminose and forosamine while the other auxiliary protein interacted only with the mycaminosyltransferase.

Publisher

American Society for Microbiology

Subject

Infectious Diseases,Pharmacology (medical),Pharmacology

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