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8GJP

A1 Int graft: Adenylation domain 1 core construct from teicoplanin biosynthesis, intermediate selection pocket graft

Summary for 8GJP
Entry DOI10.2210/pdb8gjp/pdb
DescriptorNon-ribosomal peptide synthetase, MbtH-like short polypeptide (2 entities in total)
Functional Keywordsamp-binding enzyme, nrps, adenylation domain, ligase
Biological sourceActinoplanes teichomyceticus
More
Total number of polymer chains4
Total formula weight99464.02
Authors
Hansen, M.H.,Cryle, M.J. (deposition date: 2023-03-16, release date: 2023-12-06, Last modification date: 2023-12-13)
Primary citationHansen, M.H.,Adamek, M.,Iftime, D.,Petras, D.,Schuseil, F.,Grond, S.,Stegmann, E.,Cryle, M.J.,Ziemert, N.
Resurrecting ancestral antibiotics: unveiling the origins of modern lipid II targeting glycopeptides.
Nat Commun, 14:7842-7842, 2023
Cited by
PubMed Abstract: Antibiotics are central to modern medicine, and yet they are mainly the products of intra and inter-kingdom evolutionary warfare. To understand how nature evolves antibiotics around a common mechanism of action, we investigated the origins of an extremely valuable class of compounds, lipid II targeting glycopeptide antibiotics (GPAs, exemplified by teicoplanin and vancomycin), which are used as last resort for the treatment of antibiotic resistant bacterial infections. Using a molecule-centred approach and computational techniques, we first predicted the nonribosomal peptide synthetase assembly line of paleomycin, the ancestral parent of lipid II targeting GPAs. Subsequently, we employed synthetic biology techniques to produce the predicted peptide and validated its antibiotic activity. We revealed the structure of paleomycin, which enabled us to address how nature morphs a peptide antibiotic scaffold through evolution. In doing so, we obtained temporal snapshots of key selection domains in nonribosomal peptide synthesis during the biosynthetic journey from ancestral, teicoplanin-like GPAs to modern GPAs such as vancomycin. Our study demonstrates the synergy of computational techniques and synthetic biology approaches enabling us to journey back in time, trace the temporal evolution of antibiotics, and revive these ancestral molecules. It also reveals the optimisation strategies nature has applied to evolve modern GPAs, laying the foundation for future efforts to engineer this important class of antimicrobial agents.
PubMed: 38030603
DOI: 10.1038/s41467-023-43451-4
PDB entries with the same primary citation
Experimental method
X-RAY DIFFRACTION (2.7 Å)
Structure validation

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