Design and Production
of Geranylated Cyclic Peptides
by the RiPP Enzymes SyncM and PirF
Posted on 2025-04-07 - 04:36
The growing threat of antibiotic resistance highlights
the urgent
need for new antimicrobial agents. Nonribosomal peptides (NRPs) are
potent antibiotics with complex structures, but generating novel NRP
analogues is costly and inefficient. An emerging alternative is using
ribosomally synthesized and post-translationally modified peptides
(RiPPs), which are gene-encoded, allowing for easier mutagenesis and
modification. This study aimed to produce peptides with two key structural
elements of many NRP antibiotics: a macrocycle and an N-terminal lipid
moiety. The RiPP enzymes SyncM and PirF were employed-SyncM introduced
lanthionine or methyllanthionine macrocycles, while PirF incorporated
isoprenyl chains to emulate the lipid moieties in NRPs. Both enzymes
successfully modified the templates, and their combined use generated
lipidated macrocyclic peptides, resembling lipopeptide antibiotics.
These findings demonstrate the potential of SyncM and PirF as versatile
tools for designing novel gene-encoded NRP mimics, enabling high-throughput
screening for new bioactive peptides.
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Xu, Yanli; Ruijne, Fleur; Diez, Manel Garcia; Stada, Jorrit Jilles; Kuipers, Oscar P. (1753). Design and Production
of Geranylated Cyclic Peptides
by the RiPP Enzymes SyncM and PirF. ACS Publications. Collection. https://doi.org/10.1021/acs.biomac.5c00260