posted on 2019-12-11, 16:08authored byYongwei Zhao, Robert J. A. Goode, Ralf B. Schittenhelm, Julien Tailhades, Max J. Cryle
The glycopeptide antibiotics (GPAs) serve as an important
example
of the interplay of two powerful enzymatic classes in secondary metabolism:
the coupling of nonribosomal peptide synthesis with oxidative aromatic
cross-linking performed by cytochrome P450 enzymes. This interplay
is responsible for the generation of the highly cross-linked peptide
aglycone at the core of this compound class that is required for antibiotic
activity and, as such, serves as an important point for the exploration
of chemoenzymatic routes to understand the selectivity and mechanism
of this complex cascade. Here, we demonstrate the effective reconstitution
of enzymatic tetracyclization of synthetic teicoplanin-derived heptapeptides
and furthermore discern the importance of the OxyE enzyme in maintaining
effective cyclization of such peptides bearing 3,5-dihydroxyphenylglycine
residues at position 3 in their structures. These results demonstrate
the value of chemically synthesized probes for the elucidation of
the enzyme mechanism underpinning the complex process of GPA cyclization
and furthermore show the utility of the technique for probing the
cyclization of non-natural GPA peptides by these powerful biosynthetic
enzymes.