Microbiology Spectrum (Dec 2022)

Enhanced Rishirilide Biosynthesis by a Rare In-Cluster Phosphopantetheinyl Transferase in Streptomyces xanthophaeus

  • Songya Zhang,
  • Shuai Fan,
  • Jing Zhu,
  • Liying Zhou,
  • Xiaohui Yan,
  • Zhaoyong Yang,
  • Tong Si,
  • Tao Liu

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1128/spectrum.03247-22
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 10, no. 6

Abstract

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ABSTRACT Phosphopantetheinyl transferases (PPTases) play important roles in activating apo-acyl carrier proteins (apo-ACPs) and apo-peptidyl carrier proteins (apo-PCPs) in both primary and secondary metabolism. PPTases catalyze the posttranslational modifications of those carrier proteins by covalent attachment of the 4′-phosphopantetheine group to a conserved serine residue. The protein-protein interactions between a PPTase and a cognate acyl or peptidyl carrier protein have important regulatory functions in microbial biosynthesis, but the molecular mechanism underlying their specific recognition remains elusive. In this study, we identified a new rishirilide biosynthetic gene cluster with a rare in-cluster PPTase from Streptomyces xanthophaeus no2. The function of this Sfp-type PPTase, SxrX, in rishirilide production was confirmed using genetic mutagenesis and biochemical characterization. We applied molecular modeling and site-directed mutagenesis to identify key residues mediating the protein-protein interaction between SxrX and its cognate ACP. In addition, six natural products were isolated from wild-type S. xanthophaeus no2 and the ΔsxrX mutant, including rishirilide A and lupinacidin A, that exhibited antimicrobial and anticancer activities, respectively. SxrX is the first Sfp-type PPTase identified from an aromatic polyketide biosynthetic gene cluster and shown to be responsible for high-level production of rishirilide derivatives. IMPORTANCE Genome mining has been a vital means for natural product drug discovery in the postgenomic era. The rishirilide-type polyketides have attracted attention due to their potent bioactivity, but the poor robustness of production hosts has limited further research and development. This study not only identifies a hyperproducer of rishirilides but also reveals a rare, in-cluster PPTase SxrX that plays an important role in boosting rishirilide biosynthesis. Experimental and computational investigations revealed new insights on the protein-protein interaction between SxrX and its cognate ACP with wide implications for understanding polyketide biosynthesis.

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