Award details

The role of intermediate binding in Type I and Type II acyl carrier proteins

ReferenceBB/F014570/1
Principal Investigator / Supervisor Professor Matthew Crump
Co-Investigators /
Co-Supervisors
Dr John Crosby, Professor Thomas Simpson
Institution University of Bristol
DepartmentChemistry
Funding typeResearch
Value (£) 341,860
StatusCompleted
TypeResearch Grant
Start date 02/06/2008
End date 01/06/2011
Duration36 months

Abstract

Polyketide and Fatty acids are produced by synthases (PKSs or FASs) that share many common mechanistic and structural features. In Type I synthases found in animal cells and fungi, the component enzymes are covalently linked on a single polypeptide chain. These can arranged as 'megasynthases', hugely complex enzymes with multiple domains responsible for each individual catalytic step (as in macrolide biosynthesis) or as a single set of enzymes that are used iteratively (eg Type I FAS). In Type II synthases found in prokaryotes and plants, the biosynthetic steps are mediated by transient complexes of these components. In both Type I and Type II synthases, a small protein, the acyl carrier protein (ACP) transports the nascent polyketide or fatty acid and mediates the correct protein-protein interactions along a pre-defined biosynthetic sequence. There are many published structures of ACPs and a few examples of Type II ACPs bearing fully saturated fatty acid intermediates. However equivalent examples in Type I FASs are missing and there are no examples of bacterial of fungal PKS ACPs with more challenging polyketide intermediates bound. We have used a synthetic approach to make CoAs derivatised with stabilised polyketide equivalents and a range of fatty acid intermediates from different points along the fatty acid cycle. We have combined this with solution state NMR where we have already solved the three-dimensional structures of a range of FAS and PKS ACPs and will now complete structures of these ACPs with covalently bound intermediates. We have selected a broad spectrum of examples that address Type I and Type II FASs and PKSs. In addition we want to solve the three dimensional structure of an ACP di- and tri- domain from a Type I modular PKS where preliminary data suggests their function may be uniquely defined by their location in the synthase rather than absolute enzymic activity.

Summary

Natural products play an enormous role in human and veterinary medicine providing a valuable source of antibiotics, antifungals and anticancer agents. The widespread use of, particularly, broad-spectrum antibiotics at doses aimed at disease prevention rather than the treatment of infections has meant that many organisms have developed resistance to these drugs. These include bacteria, which cause serious infections in hospitalised patients despite government attempts to clean up wards and improve hygiene; bacteria that cause respiratory diseases such as pneumonia and tuberculosis; food-borne pathogens and sexually transmitted organisms. A significant research priority is to develop new drugs in this constant to and fro battle, which can deal with these resistant organisms. To combat this we are studying the bacteria and fungi that provide these valuable sources of natural products. Intense research over the last 30 years has greatly increased our understanding of how these organisms make these molecules. It turns out not to be simple. It is now known that there are vastly complex arrays of enzymes (complex biological molecules) that perform a series of programmed building steps to produce the final molecule. This can be likened to a production line where each element has a particular job to do and must do it in the correct order and with very high precision. Sometimes these arrays are arranged as one large assembly, in others they are present as separate components that somehow find each other as required. Despite these different architectures, each of these assembly lines features a common component, a so called Acyl Carrier Protein or ACP. This protein is an intelligent chip that must carry the molecule being processed to each enzyme and in some cases may shield it from the surrounding environment. We want to understand how this protein works, how it recognises its partners and how it may protect the molecule it is carrying. To do this, we use a technique called Nuclear Magnetic Resonance spectroscopy (NMR) that works with aqueous solutions of the proteins and tells us their shape. We combine this technique with our ability to modify the ACP with molecules that resemble the natural molecules it carries. We wish to understand if it actively uses the molecule it carries to change its shape so it then fits correctly into the correct next enzyme in the synthetic sequence. We will look at a number of different ACPs that carry different types of molecules and which have a varying need for molecular recognition and product stabilisation. We have also discovered that some assemblies use more than one ACP at critical junctions and these may help relieve bottlenecks in the biosynthetic sequence. Our understanding of these ACPs is very limited so we wish to begin to understand how 2 or 3 ACPs might fit together and cooperate with one another.
Committee Closed Committee - Biomolecular Sciences (BMS)
Research TopicsIndustrial Biotechnology, Microbiology, Structural Biology
Research PriorityX – Research Priority information not available
Research Initiative X - not in an Initiative
Funding SchemeX – not Funded via a specific Funding Scheme
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