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American Chemical Society, Journal of Natural Products, 5(76), p. 939-946, 2013

DOI: 10.1021/np400159a

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Genetic Insights Into Pyralomicin Biosynthesis in Nonomuraea spiralis IMC A-0156

Journal article published in 2013 by Patricia M. Flatt, Xiumei Wu, Steven Perry, Taifo Mahmud ORCID
This paper is available in a repository.
This paper is available in a repository.

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Abstract

The biosynthetic gene cluster for the pyralomicin antibiotics has been cloned and sequenced from Nonomuraea spiralis IMC A-0156. The 41-kb gene cluster contains 27 ORFs predicted to encode all of the functions for pyralomicin biosynthesis. This includes non-ribosomal peptide synthetases (NRPS) and polyketide synthases (PKS) required for the formation of the benzopyranopyrrole core unit, as well as a suite of tailoring enzymes (e.g., four halogenases, an O-methyltransferase, and an N-glycosyltransferase) necessary for further modifications of the core structure. The N-glycosyltransferase is predicted to transfer either glucose or a pseudosugar (cyclitol) to the aglycone. A gene cassette encoding C7-cyclitol biosynthetic enzymes was identified upstream of the benzopyranopyrrole-specific ORFs. Targeted disruption of the gene encoding the N-glycosyltransferase, prlH, abolished pyralomicin production and recombinant expression of PrlA confirms the activity of this enzyme as a sugar phosphate cyclase (SPC) involved in the formation of the C7-cyclitol moiety.