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Illuminating and exploiting programmed O-methylation in trans-AT polyketide synthases
Reference
BB/W003171/1
Principal Investigator / Supervisor
Professor Józef Lewandowski
Co-Investigators /
Co-Supervisors
Professor Gregory Challis
,
Dr Arun Gupta
Institution
University of Warwick
Department
Chemistry
Funding type
Research
Value (£)
795,020
Status
Current
Type
Research Grant
Start date
01/10/2021
End date
30/09/2024
Duration
36 months
Abstract
O-methylation is a frequent modification of natural product scaffolds that plays an important role in the modulation of pharmacokinetic and pharmacodynamic properties. In most natural product biosynthetic pathways, O-methylation occurs after scaffold assembly and is catalysed by highly regiospecific enzymes. However, trans-acyl transferase (AT) polyketide synthases (PKSs) employ specific submodules that catalyse O-methylation of beta-hydroxy thioester intermediates during chain assembly. The programmed nature of O-methylation in trans-AT PKSs, where the methylation pattern of the product is dictated by the presence or absence of OMT domains in individual modules, presents an attractive opportunity for biosynthetic engineering. However, to reprogram O-methylation in these systems a detailed understanding of the catalytic function of O-methylating submodules is required. In this project, we aim to apply an integrated structural and chemical biology approach to elucidate the molecular function of an O-methylating submodule in the trans-AT PKS responsible for the biosynthesis of the antibiotic gladiolin, and related systems. To understand the contributions made by specific protein-protein interactions, local and global protein conformational changes and substrate specificity in the control and fidelity of O-methylation we will combine solution and solid-state NMR spectroscopy, carbene footprinting mass spectrometry, molecular dynamics and modelling, and other biophysical techniques, with enzyme activity assays employing synthetic substrate analogues, site-specific covalent and non-covalent crosslinking strategies, and collaborative single particle cryo-electron microscopy studies. The results of our research will underpin future efforts to reprogram O-methylation in trans-AT PKSs, resulting in the creation of novel polyketide derivatives with altered methylation patterns.
Summary
There is an urgent need to produce novel derivatives of natural product-based medicines, such as antibiotics and anticancer agents, to overcome drug resistance. Moreover, many herbicides, insecticides, and fungicides, which play an essential role in the protection of food crops, are natural products and new derivatives with lower toxicity and greater efficacy are needed to feed the burgeoning global population. Development of novel methodologies for structural modification of natural products and enhancing their production levels are important applications of synthetic biology. Many important natural products are built by modular multienzyme assembly lines. These offer strong potential for rational bioengineering to create novel natural product derivatives. However, a lack of detailed molecular insight into the structure, mechanism, and substrate tolerance of these inherently mobile protein machines has limited progress in this endeavour. Thus, there is a need to develop novel structure-based approaches to elucidating the mechanism and substrate specificity determinants of specific components of such machinery. This project aims to develop an atomic-level understanding of how assembly line machinery appends methyl groups to specific oxygen atoms during assembly of an important class of natural products known as polyketides. To do this, we will develop and apply strategies for capturing intrinsically dynamic components of these machines in specific functional states, which will facilitate the determination of their molecular structures using a variety of methods, including nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy, carbene-footprinting mass spectrometry and cryo-electron microscopy. We will also investigate the substrate tolerance of key parts of the machinery using chemically synthesised probe molecules. The new knowledge gained will inform future efforts to bioengineer these assembly lines to produce novel natural product derivatives with altered pharmacokinetic and pharmacodynamic profiles. This has the potential to exploited by UK-based pharmaceutical, agrochemical and biotechnology companies actively engaged in the development of natural product-based consumer products, which will ultimately benefit to wider society.
Committee
Research Committee D (Molecules, cells and industrial biotechnology)
Research Topics
Industrial Biotechnology, Structural Biology
Research Priority
X – Research Priority information not available
Research Initiative
X - not in an Initiative
Funding Scheme
X – not Funded via a specific Funding Scheme
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