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1. Howard-Jones  AR, Walsh  CT,     ( 2006 )

Staurosporine and rebeccamycin aglycones are assembled by the oxidative action of StaP, StaC, and RebC on chromopyrrolic acid.

Journal of the American Chemical Society 128 (37)
PMID : 16967980  :   DOI  :   10.1021/ja063898m    
Abstract >>
In the biosynthesis of the antitumor indolocarbazoles rebeccamycin and staurosporine by streptomycetes, assembly of the aglycones involves a complex set of oxidative condensations. Overall formation of aglycones K252c and arcyriaflavin A from their biosynthetic precursor chromopyrrolic acid involves four- and eight-electron oxidations, respectively. This process is catalyzed by the remarkable enzyme StaP, with StaC and RebC acting to direct the level of oxidation in the newly formed five-membered ring. An aryl-aryl coupling reaction is integral to this transformation as well as oxidative decarboxylation of the dicarboxypyrrole moiety of chromopyrrolic acid. Herein we describe the heterologous expression of staP, staC, and rebC in Escherichia coli and the activity of the corresponding enzymes in constructing the two distinct six-ring scaffolds. StaP is a cytochrome P450 enzyme, requiring dioxygen, ferredoxin, flavodoxin NADP(+)-reductase, and NAD(P)H for activity. StaP on its own converts chromopyrrolic acid into three aglycone products, K252c, arcyriaflavin A, and 7-hydroxy-K252c; in the presence of StaC, K252c is the predominant product, while the presence of RebC directs formation of arcyriaflavin A. (18)O-Labeling studies indicate that the oxygen(s) of the pyrrolinone and maleimide functionalities of the aglycones formed are all derived from dioxygen. This work allowed for the in vitro reconstitution of the full biosynthetic pathway from l-tryptophan to the staurosporine and rebeccamycin aglycones, K252c and 1,11-dichloroarcyriaflavin A.
KeywordMeSH Terms
2.     ( 1994 )

An ABC-transporter from Streptomyces longisporoflavus confers resistance to the polyether-ionophore antibiotic tetronasin.

Molecular microbiology 11 (4)
PMID : 8196549  :   DOI  :   10.1111/j.1365-2958.1994.tb00355.x    
Abstract >>
Streptomyces longisporoflavus produces the polyketide-polyether antibiotic, tetronasin, which acts as an ionophore and depolarizes the membrane of bacteria sensitive to the drug. A genomic library of S. longisporoflavus DNA was cloned in Streptomyces lividans and screened to identify tetronasin-resistance determinants. The inclusion of 0.2M NaCl in the growth medium with tetronasin markedly improved the sensitivity of the screen. Two different resistance determinants, designated tnrB (ptetR51) and tnrA (ptetR11) respectively, were identified. The determinant tnrB (ptetR51) but not tnrA (ptetR11), also conferred resistance to tetronasin when cloned into Streptomyces albus. The tnrB determinant was further localized, by subcloning, to a 2.8 kb KpnI fragment. DNA sequence analysis of this insert revealed one incomplete and two complete open reading frames (ORFs 1, 2 and 3). The deduced sequence of the gene product of ORF2 (TnrB2) revealed significant similarity to the ATP-binding domains of the ABC (ATP binding cassette) superfamily of transport-related proteins. The adjacent gene, ORF3, is translationally coupled to ORF2 and would encode a hydrophobic protein (TnrB3) with six transmembrane helices which probably constitutes the integral membrane component of the transporter. The mechanism of tetronasin resistance mediated by tnrB is probably an ATP-dependent efflux system.
KeywordMeSH Terms
Genes, Bacterial

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