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    A unique mechanism for methyl ester formation via an amide intermediate found in myxobacteria.

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    Authors
    Müller, Inga
    Weinig, Stefan
    Steinmetz, Heinrich
    Kunze, Birgitte
    Veluthoor, Sheeba
    Mahmud, Taifo
    Müller, Rolf
    Issue Date
    2006-08-01
    
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    Abstract
    Secondary metabolism involves a broad diversity of biochemical reactions that result in a wide variety of biologically active compounds. Terminal amide formation during the biosynthesis of the myxobacterial electron-transport inhibitor, myxothiazol, was analyzed by heterologous expression of the unique nonribosomal-peptide synthetase, MtaG, and incubation with a synthesized substrate mimic. These experiments provide evidence that the terminal amide is formed from a carrier protein-bound myxothiazol acid that is thioesterified to MtaF. This intermediate is transformed to an amide by extension with glycine and subsequent oxidative cleavage by MtaG. The final steps of melithiazol assembly involve a highly similar protein-bound intermediate (attached to MelF, a homologue of MtaF), which is transformed to an amide by MelG (homologue of MtaG). In this study, we also show that the amide moiety of myxothiazol A can be hydrolyzed in vivo to the formerly unknown free myxothiazol acid by heterologous expression of melJ in the myxothiazol producer Stigmatella aurantiaca DW4/3-1. The methyltransferase MelK can finally methylate the acid to give rise to the methyl ester, which is produced as the final product in the melithiazol A biosynthetic pathway. These experiments clarify the role of MelJ and MelK during melithiazol assembly.
    Citation
    Chembiochem 2006, 7(8):1197-205
    URI
    http://hdl.handle.net/10033/12426
    DOI
    10.1002/cbic.200600057
    PubMed ID
    16807964
    Type
    Article
    Language
    en
    ISSN
    1439-4227
    ae974a485f413a2113503eed53cd6c53
    10.1002/cbic.200600057
    Scopus Count
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    publications of the research group microbial communication (KOM)

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