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Diversity oriented biosynthesis via accelerated evolution of modular gene clusters.

Authors :
Wlodek A
Kendrew SG
Coates NJ
Hold A
Pogwizd J
Rudder S
Sheehan LS
Higginbotham SJ
Stanley-Smith AE
Warneck T
Nur-E-Alam M
Radzom M
Martin CJ
Overvoorde L
Samborskyy M
Alt S
Heine D
Carter GT
Graziani EI
Koehn FE
McDonald L
Alanine A
Rodríguez Sarmiento RM
Chao SK
Ratni H
Steward L
Norville IH
Sarkar-Tyson M
Moss SJ
Leadlay PF
Wilkinson B
Gregory MA
Source :
Nature communications [Nat Commun] 2017 Oct 31; Vol. 8 (1), pp. 1206. Date of Electronic Publication: 2017 Oct 31.
Publication Year :
2017

Abstract

Erythromycin, avermectin and rapamycin are clinically useful polyketide natural products produced on modular polyketide synthase multienzymes by an assembly-line process in which each module of enzymes in turn specifies attachment of a particular chemical unit. Although polyketide synthase encoding genes have been successfully engineered to produce novel analogues, the process can be relatively slow, inefficient, and frequently low-yielding. We now describe a method for rapidly recombining polyketide synthase gene clusters to replace, add or remove modules that, with high frequency, generates diverse and highly productive assembly lines. The method is exemplified in the rapamycin biosynthetic gene cluster where, in a single experiment, multiple strains were isolated producing new members of a rapamycin-related family of polyketides. The process mimics, but significantly accelerates, a plausible mechanism of natural evolution for modular polyketide synthases. Detailed sequence analysis of the recombinant genes provides unique insight into the design principles for constructing useful synthetic assembly-line multienzymes.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
2041-1723
Volume :
8
Issue :
1
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
Nature communications
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
29089518
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-017-01344-3