Insights from the sea: Structural biology of marine polyketide synthasesThis paper is part of an NPR themed issue on Structural Aspects of Biosynthesis
Covering: up to the end of 2011 The world's oceans are a rich source of natural products with extremely interesting chemistry. Biosynthetic pathways have been worked out for a few, and the story is being enriched with crystal structures of interesting pathway enzymes. By far, the greatest numbe...
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Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | Covering: up to the end of 2011
The world's oceans are a rich source of natural products with extremely interesting chemistry. Biosynthetic pathways have been worked out for a few, and the story is being enriched with crystal structures of interesting pathway enzymes. By far, the greatest number of structural insights from marine biosynthetic pathways has originated with studies of curacin A, a poster child for interesting marine chemistry with its cyclopropane and thiazoline rings, internal
cis
double bond, and terminal alkene. Using the curacin A pathway as a model, structural details are now available for a novel loading enzyme with remarkable dual decarboxylase and acetyltransferase activities, an Fe
2+
/α-ketoglutarate-dependent halogenase that dictates substrate binding order through conformational changes, a decarboxylase that establishes regiochemistry for cyclopropane formation, and a thioesterase with specificity for β-sulfated substrates that lead to terminal alkene offloading. The four curacin A pathway dehydratases reveal an intrinsic flexibility that may accommodate bulky or stiff polyketide intermediates. In the salinosporamide A pathway, active site volume determines the halide specificity of a halogenase that catalyzes for the synthesis of a halogenated building block. Structures of a number of putative polyketide cyclases may help in understanding reaction mechanisms and substrate specificities although their substrates are presently unknown.
Among the marine derived natural product pathways, the pathway for biosynthesis of curacin A has been the most studied from the structural biology perspective. Structures of enzymes responsible for synthesis of specific functional groups of curacin A are shown here. |
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ISSN: | 0265-0568 1460-4752 |
DOI: | 10.1039/c2np20016c |