Acta Pharmaceutica Sinica B (Feb 2023)

Insights into the biosynthesis of septacidin l-heptosamine moiety unveils a VOC family sugar epimerase

  • Meng Chen,
  • Zhengyan Guo,
  • Jinyuan Sun,
  • Wei Tang,
  • Min Wang,
  • Yue Tang,
  • Pengwei Li,
  • Bian Wu,
  • Yihua Chen

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 13, no. 2
pp. 765 – 774

Abstract

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l-Heptopyranoses are important components of bacterial polysaccharides and biological active secondary metabolites like septacidin (SEP), which represents a group of nucleoside antibiotics with antitumor, antifungal, and pain-relief activities. However, little is known about the formation mechanisms of those l-heptose moieties. In this study, we deciphered the biosynthetic pathway of the l,l-gluco-heptosamine moiety in SEPs by functional characterizing four genes and proposed that SepI initiates the process by oxidizing the 4′-hydroxyl of l-glycero-α-d-manno-heptose moiety of SEP-328 (2) to a keto group. Subsequently, SepJ (C5 epimerase) and SepA (C3 epimerase) shape the 4′-keto-l-heptopyranose moiety by sequential epimerization reactions. At the last step, an aminotransferase SepG installs the 4′-amino group of the l,l-gluco-heptosamine moiety to generate SEP-327 (3). An interesting phenomenon is that the SEP intermediates with 4′-keto-l-heptopyranose moieties exist as special bicyclic sugars with hemiacetal-hemiketal structures. Notably, l-pyranose is usually converted from d-pyranose by bifunctional C3/C5 epimerase. SepA is an unprecedented monofunctional l-pyranose C3 epimerase. Further in silico and experimental studies revealed that it represents an overlooked metal dependent-sugar epimerase family bearing vicinal oxygen chelate (VOC) architecture.

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