posted on 2021-06-04, 13:04authored byIan R. Bothwell, Tânia Caetano, Raymond Sarksian, Sónia Mendo, Wilfred A. van der Donk
Lanthipeptides
are ribosomally synthesized and post-translationally
modified peptide natural products characterized by the presence of
lanthionine and methyllanthionine cross-linked amino acids formed
by dehydration of Ser/Thr residues followed by conjugate addition
of Cys to the resulting dehydroamino acids. Class I lanthipeptide
dehydratases utilize glutamyl-tRNAGlu as a cosubstrate
to glutamylate Ser/Thr followed by glutamate elimination. A vast majority
of lanthipeptides identified from class I synthase systems have been
from Gram-positive bacteria. Herein, we report the heterologous expression
and modification in Escherichia coli of two lanthipeptides
from the Gram-negative Bacteroidetes Pedobacter lusitanus NL19. These peptides are representative of a group of compounds
frequently encoded in Pedobacter genomes. Structural
characterization of the lanthipeptides revealed a novel ring pattern
as well as an unusual ll-lanthionine stereochemical configuration
and a cyclase that lacks the canonical zinc ligands found in most
LanC enzymes.