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Characterization of a Citrulline 4‐Hydroxylase from Nonribosomal Peptide GE81112 Biosynthesis and Engineering of Its Substrate Specificity for the Chemoenzymatic Synthesis of Enduracididine
Author(s) -
Zwick Christian R.,
Sosa Max B.,
Renata Hans
Publication year - 2019
Publication title -
angewandte chemie international edition
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 5.831
H-Index - 550
eISSN - 1521-3773
pISSN - 1433-7851
DOI - 10.1002/anie.201910659
Subject(s) - nonribosomal peptide , biosynthesis , enzyme , biochemistry , biogenesis , chemistry , protein engineering , peptide , amino acid , citrulline , stereochemistry , arginine , gene
Abstract The GE81112 tetrapeptides are a small family of unusual nonribosomal peptide congeners with potent inhibitory activity against prokaryotic translation initiation. With the exception of the 3‐hydroxy‐ l ‐pipecolic acid unit, little is known about the biosynthetic origins of the non‐proteinogenic amino acid monomers of the natural product family. Here, we elucidate the biogenesis of the 4‐hydroxy‐ l ‐citrulline unit and establish the role of an iron‐ and α‐ketoglutarate‐dependent enzyme (Fe/αKG) in the pathway. Homology modelling and sequence alignment analysis further facilitate the rational engineering of this enzyme to become a specific 4‐arginine hydroxylase. We subsequently demonstrate the utility of this engineered enzyme in the synthesis of a dipeptide fragment of the antibiotic enduracidin. This work highlights the value of applying a bioinformatics‐guided approach in the discovery of novel enzymes and engineering of new catalytic activity into existing ones.

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