The dimeric diketopiperazine (DKPs) alkaloids are a diverse family of natural products (NPs) whose unique structural architectures and biological activities have inspired the development of new synthetic methodology to access these molecules. However, catalystcontrolled methods that enable the selective formation of constitutional and stereoisomeric dimers from a single monomer are lacking. To resolve this long-standing synthetic challenge, we sought to characterize the biosynthetic enzymes that assemble these NPs for application in biocatalytic syntheses. Genome mining enabled identification of the cytochrome P450, NzeB (derived from Streptomyces sp. NRRL F-5053), which catalyzes both intermolecular carbon-carbon (C-C) and carbon-nitrogen (C-N) bond formation, generating all currently known DKP dimer scaffolds isolated from bacterial sources. To identify the molecular basis for the flexible site-, stereo-, and chemoselectivity of NzeB, we obtained high-resolution crystal structures (1.5Å) of the protein in complex with native and non-native substrates. This, to our knowledge, represents the first crystal structure of an oxidase catalyzing direct, intermolecular C-H amination. Site-directed mutagenesis was employed to assess the role individual active site residues play in guiding selective DKP dimerization. Finally, computational approaches were employed to evaluate plausible mechanisms regarding NzeB function and its ability to catalyze both CC and C-N bond formation. These results provide a structural and computational rationale for the catalytic versatility of NzeB, as well as new insights into variables that control selectivity of CYP450 diketopiperazine dimerases. ASSOCIATED CONTENT Supporting Information The Supporting Information is available free of charge on the ACS Publications website.
Fungal bicyclo[2.2.2]diazaoctane indole alkaloids represent an important family of natural products with a wide-spectrum of biological activities. Although biomimetic total syntheses have been completed for representative compounds, the details of their biogenesis, especially the mechanisms for assembly of diastereomerically distinct and enantiomerically antipodal metabolites, have remained largely uncharacterized. Brevianamide A represents the most basic form of the sub-family bearing a dioxopiperazine core and a rare 3-spiro-ψ-indoxyl skeleton. Here, we identified the Brevianamide A biosynthetic gene cluster from Penicillium brevicompactum NRRL 864 and fully elucidated the metabolic pathway by gene disruption, heterologous expression, precursor incorporation experiments, and in vitro biochemical analysis. In particular, we determined BvnE as a cofactor-independent isomerase/pinacolase that is essential for selective production of Brevianamide A. Structural elucidation, molecular modeling, and mutational analysis of BvnE, and quantum chemical calculations provided critical mechanistic insights into the diastereoselective formation of the 3-spiro-ψ-indoxyl moiety in Brevianamide A. This occurs through a BvnE-controlled semi-pinacol rearrangement and a subsequent spontaneous intramolecular [4+2] hetero-Diels-Alder cycloaddition. Resolution of this 50-year old mechanistic mystery together with our recent characterization of the Diels-Alderase-mediated biogenesis of monooxopiperazines highlight the diversified biosynthetic strategies deployed by fungi for creating structurally diverse spiro-cyclized indole alkaloids.Fungal indole alkaloids bearing the unusual bicyclo[2.2.2]diazaoctane core have drawn considerable attention from natural product, synthetic and biological chemists for decades. A wealth of studies on the discovery of analogs (including semi-synthetic, synthetic and natural), biological activities and biosynthetic mechanisms have been
Macrolactonization of natural product analogs presents a significant challenge to both biosynthetic assembly and synthetic chemistry. In the preceding paper, we identified a thioesterase (TE) domain catalytic bottleneck processing unnatural substrates in the pikromycin (Pik) system, preventing the formation of epimerized macrolactones. Here, we perform molecular dynamics (MD) simulations showing the epimerized hexaketide was accommodated within the Pik TE active site; however, intrinsic conformational preferences of the substrate resulted in predominately unproductive conformations, in agreement with the observed hydrolysis. Accordingly, we engineered the stereospecific Pik TE to yield a variant (TES148C) with improved reaction kinetics and gain-of-function processing of an unnatural, epimerized hexaketide. Quantum mechanical (QM) comparison of model TES148C and TEWT reaction coordinate diagrams revealed a change in mechanism from a stepwise addition-elimination (TEWT) to a lower energy concerted acyl substitution (TES148C), accounting for the gain-of-function and improved reaction kinetics. Finally, we introduced the S148C mutation into a polyketide synthase module (PikAIII-TE) to impart increased substrate flexibility, enabling the production of diastereomeric macrolactones.
Prenylated indole alkaloids isolated from various fungi possess great structural diversity and pharmaceutical utility. Among them are the calmodulin inhibitory malbrancheamides and paraherquamides, used as anthelmintics in animal health. Herein, we report complete elucidation of the malbrancheamide biosynthetic pathway accomplished through complementary approaches. These include a biomimetic total synthesis to access the natural alkaloid and biosynthetic intermediates in racemic form, and in vitro enzymatic reconstitution that provides access to the natural antipode (+)-malbrancheamide. Reductive cleavage of a L-Pro-L-Trp dipeptide from the MalG nonribosomal peptide synthetase (NRPS) followed by reverse prenylation and a cascade of post-NRPS reactions culminates in an intramolecular [4+2] hetero-Diels-Alder (IMDA) cyclization to furnish the bicyclo[2.2.2]diazaoctane scaffold. Enzymatic assembly of optically pure (+)-premalbrancheamide involves an unexpected zwitterionic intermediate where MalC catalyzes enantioselective cycloaddition as a bifunctional NADPHdependent reductase/Diels-Alderase. Crystal structures of substrate and product complexes together with site-directed mutagenesis and molecular dynamics simulations demonstrated how MalC and PhqE, its homolog from the paraherquamide pathway, catalyze diastereo-and enantioselective cyclization in the construction of this fascinating class of secondary metabolites.
Prenylated indole alkaloids isolated from various fungi possess great structural diversity and pharmaceutical utility. Among them are the calmodulin inhibitory malbrancheamides and paraherquamides, used as anthelmintics in animal health. Herein, we report complete elucidation of the malbrancheamide biosynthetic pathway accomplished through complementary approaches. These include a biomimetic total synthesis to access the natural alkaloid and biosynthetic intermediates in racemic form, and in vitro enzymatic reconstitution that provides access to the natural antipode (+)-malbrancheamide. Reductive cleavage of a L-Pro-L-Trp dipeptide from the MalG nonribosomal peptide synthetase (NRPS) followed by reverse prenylation and a cascade of post-NRPS reactions culminates in an intramolecular [4+2] hetero-Diels-Alder (IMDA) cyclization to furnish the bicyclo[2.2.2]diazaoctane scaffold. Enzymatic assembly of optically pure (+)-premalbrancheamide involves an unexpected zwitterionic intermediate where MalC catalyzes enantioselective cycloaddition as a bifunctional NADPH-dependent reductase/Diels-Alderase. Crystal structures of substrate and product complexes together with site-directed mutagenesis and molecular dynamics simulations demonstrated how MalC and PhqE, its homolog from the paraherquamide pathway, catalyze diastereo- and enantioselective cyclization in the construction of this important class of secondary metabolites.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.
hi@scite.ai
10624 S. Eastern Ave., Ste. A-614
Henderson, NV 89052, USA
Copyright © 2024 scite LLC. All rights reserved.
Made with 💙 for researchers
Part of the Research Solutions Family.