Catalytic promiscuity in the biosynthesis of cyclic peptide secondary metabolites in planktonic marine cyanobacteria.

Title

Catalytic promiscuity in the biosynthesis of cyclic peptide secondary metabolites in planktonic marine cyanobacteria.

Publication Type
Journal Article

Authors

Chisholm, Sallie W
Kelly, Libusha
Huang, Katherine
Sher, Daniel
Li, Bo
Shi, Yanxiang
Knerr, Patrick J
Joewono, Ike
Rusch, Doug
van der Donk, Wilfred A
Journal
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A
Year of Publication
2010
Volume
107
Pagination
10430-5
Date Published
2010 Jun 8
Publication Language
eng
Abstract

Our understanding of secondary metabolite production in bacteria has been shaped primarily by studies of attached varieties such as symbionts, pathogens, and soil bacteria. Here we show that a strain of the single-celled, planktonic marine cyanobacterium Prochlorococcus-which conducts a sizable fraction of photosynthesis in the oceans-produces many cyclic, lanthionine-containing peptides (lantipeptides). Remarkably, in Prochlorococcus MIT9313 a single promiscuous enzyme transforms up to 29 different linear ribosomally synthesized peptides into a library of polycyclic, conformationally constrained products with highly diverse ring topologies. Genes encoding this system are found in variable abundances across the oceans-with a hot spot in a Galapagos hypersaline lagoon-suggesting they play a habitat- and/or community-specific role. The extraordinarily efficient pathway for generating structural diversity enables these cyanobacteria to produce as many secondary metabolites as model antibiotic-producing bacteria, but with much smaller genomes.

Issue
23
Alternate Journal
Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U.S.A.
Citation Key
222
COinS Data
ISSN
1091-6490