posted on 2021-07-01, 13:36authored byAleksa Stanišić, Annika Hüsken, Philipp Stephan, David L. Niquille, Jochen Reinstein, Hajo Kries
Engineering of nonribosomal peptide
synthetases (NRPSs) has faced
numerous obstacles despite being an attractive path toward bioactive
molecules. Specificity filters in the nonribosomal peptide assembly
line determine engineering success, but the relative contribution
of the adenylation (A) and condensation (C) domains is under debate.
In the engineered, bimodular NRPS sdV-GrsA/GrsB1, the first module
is a subdomain-swapped chimera showing substrate promiscuity. On sdV-GrsA
and evolved mutants, we have employed kinetic modeling to investigate
product specificity under substrate competition. Our model contains
one step in which the A-domain acylates the thiolation (T) domain
and one condensation step in which deacylation of the T-domain occurs.
The simplified model agrees well with the experimentally determined
acylation preferences and shows that the condensation specificity
is mismatched with the engineered acylation specificity. Our model
predicts that product specificity changes during the course of the
reaction due to dynamic T-domain loading and that the A-domain overrules
the C-domain specificity when the T-domain loading reaches a steady
state. Thus, we have established a tool for investigating the poorly
accessible C-domain specificity through nonlinear kinetic modeling
and gained critical insights into how the interplay of the A- and
C-domains determines the product specificity of NRPSs.