Enzymatic thioamide tormation in a bacterial antimetabolite pathway.

Litomska A, Ishida K, Dunbar KL, Boettger M, Coyne S, Hertweck C (2018) Enzymatic thioamide tormation in a bacterial antimetabolite pathway. Angew Chem Int Ed 57(36), 11574-11578.

Abstract

6-Thioguanine (6TG) is a DNA-targeting therapeutic used in the treatment of various cancers. While 6TG was rationally designed as a proof of concept for antimetabolite therapy, it is also a rare thioamide-bearing bacterial natural product and critical virulence factor of Erwinia amylovorans, plant pathogens that cause fire blight. Through gene expression, biochemical assays, and mutational analyses, we identified a specialized bipartite enzyme system, consisting of an ATP-dependent sulfur transferase (YcfA) and a sulfur-mobilizing enzyme (YcfC), that is responsible for the peculiar oxygen-by-sulfur substitution found in the biosynthesis of 6TG. Mechanistic and phylogenetic studies revealed that YcfA-mediated 6TG biosynthesis evolved from ancient tRNA modifications that support translational fidelity. The successful in vitro reconstitution of 6TG thioamidation showed that YcfA employs a specialized sulfur shuttle that markedly differs from universal RNA-related systems. This study sheds light on underexplored enzymatic C-S bond formation in natural product biosynthesis.

Leibniz-HKI-Authors

Kyle Dunbar
Christian Hertweck
Keishi Ishida
Agnieszka Litomska

Identifier

doi: 10.1002/anie.201804158

PMID: 29947149