Employing the promiscuity of lantibiotic biosynthetic machineries to produce novel antimicrobials

Abstract As the number of new antibiotics that reach the market is decreasing and the demand for them is rising, alternative sources of novel antimicrobials are needed. Lantibiotics are potent peptide antimicrobials that are ribosomally synthesized and stabilized by post-translationally introduced l...

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Veröffentlicht in:FEMS microbiology reviews 2017-01, Vol.41 (1), p.5-18
Hauptverfasser: Montalbán-López, Manuel, van Heel, Auke J., Kuipers, Oscar P.
Format: Artikel
Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Abstract As the number of new antibiotics that reach the market is decreasing and the demand for them is rising, alternative sources of novel antimicrobials are needed. Lantibiotics are potent peptide antimicrobials that are ribosomally synthesized and stabilized by post-translationally introduced lanthionine rings. Their ribosomal synthesis and enzymatic modifications provide excellent opportunities to design and engineer a large variety of novel antimicrobial compounds. The research conducted in this area demonstrates that the modularity present in both the peptidic rings as well as in the combination of promiscuous modification enzymes can be exploited to further increase the diversity of lantibiotics. Various approaches, where the modifying enzymes and corresponding leader peptides are decoupled from their natural core peptide and integrated in designed plug-and-play production systems, enable the production of modified peptides that are either derived from vast genomic data or designed using functional parts from a wide diversity of core peptides. These approaches constitute a powerful discovery platform to develop novel antimicrobials with high therapeutic potential. The ribosomal synthesis and enzymatic modifications of lantibiotics provide excellent opportunities to design and engineer a great variety of novel antimicrobial compounds.
ISSN:1574-6976
0168-6445
1574-6976
DOI:10.1093/femsre/fuw034