Microbial Biotechnology (Jul 2019)

Phylogeny‐guided characterization of glycosyltransferases for epothilone glycosylation

  • Peng Zhang,
  • Zheng Zhang,
  • Zhi‐feng Li,
  • Qi Chen,
  • Yao‐yao Li,
  • Ya Gong,
  • Xin‐jing Yue,
  • Duo‐hong Sheng,
  • You‐ming Zhang,
  • Changsheng Wu,
  • Yue‐zhong Li

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1111/1751-7915.13421
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 12, no. 4
pp. 763 – 774

Abstract

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Summary Glycosylation of natural products can influence their pharmacological properties, and efficient glycosyltransferases (GTs) are critical for this purpose. The polyketide epothilones are potent anti‐tumour compounds, and YjiC is the only reported GT for the glycosylation of epothilone. In this study, we phylogenetically analysed 8261 GTs deposited in CAZy database and revealed that YjiC locates in a subbranch of the Macrolide I group, forming the YjiC‐subbranch with 160 GT sequences. We demonstrated that the YjiC‐subbranch GTs are normally efficient in epothilone glycosylation, but some showed low glycosylation activities. Sequence alignment of YjiC‐subbranch showed that the 66th and 77th amino acid residues, which were close to the catalytic cavity in molecular docking model, were conserved in five high‐active GTs (Q66 and P77) but changed in two low‐efficient GTs. Site‐directed residues swapping at the two positions in the two low‐active GTs (BssGT and BamGT) and the high‐active GT BsGT‐1 demonstrated that the two amino acid residues played an important role in the catalytic efficiency of epothilone glycosylation. This study highlights that the potent GTs for appointed compounds are phylogenetically grouped with conserved residues for the catalytic efficiency.