Affiliation:
1. Department of Chemistry, University of California, Davis, California 95616
Abstract
ABSTRACT
The macrotetrolides are a family of cyclic polyethers derived from tetramerization, in a stereospecific fashion, of the enantiomeric nonactic acid (NA) and its homologs. Isotope labeling experiments established that NA is of polyketide origin, and biochemical investigations demonstrated that 2-methyl-6,8-dihydroxynon-2
E
-enoic acid can be converted into NA by a cell-free preparation from
Streptomyces lividans
that expresses
nonS
. These results lead to the hypothesis that macrotetrolide biosynthesis involves a pair of enantiospecific polyketide pathways. In this work, a 55-kb contiguous DNA region was cloned from
Streptomyces griseus
DSM40695, a 6.3-kb fragment of which was sequenced to reveal five open reading frames, including the previously reported
nonR
and
nonS
genes. Inactivation of
nonS
in vivo completely abolished macrotetrolide production. Complementation of the
nonS
mutant by the expression of
nonS
in
trans
fully restored its macrotetrolide production ability, with a distribution of individual macrotetrolides similar to that for the wild-type producer. In contrast, fermentation of the
nonS
mutant in the presence of exogenous (±)-NA resulted in the production of nonactin, monactin, and dinactin but not in the production of trinactin and tetranactin. These results prove the direct involvement of
nonS
in macrotetrolide biosynthesis. The difference in macrotetrolide production between in vivo complementation of the
nonS
mutant by the plasmid-borne
nonS
gene and fermentation of the
nonS
mutant in the presence of exogenously added (±)-NA suggests that NonS catalyzes the formation of (−)-NA and its homologs, supporting the existence of a pair of enantiospecific polyketide pathways for macrotetrolide biosynthesis in
S. griseus
. The latter should provide a model that can be used to study the mechanism by which polyketide synthase controls stereochemistry during polyketide biosynthesis.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Subject
Infectious Diseases,Pharmacology (medical),Pharmacology
Cited by
52 articles.
订阅此论文施引文献
订阅此论文施引文献,注册后可以免费订阅5篇论文的施引文献,订阅后可以查看论文全部施引文献