4.8 Article

Structure of a modular polyketide synthase

Journal

NATURE
Volume 510, Issue 7506, Pages 512-+

Publisher

NATURE PUBLISHING GROUP
DOI: 10.1038/nature13423

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Pew Scholar Program in Biomedical Sciences
  2. University of Michigan Biological Sciences Scholars Program
  3. Rackham Merit fellowship
  4. American Foundation for Pharmaceutical Education predoctoral fellowship
  5. National Research Service Award postdoctoral fellowship
  6. Life Sciences Research Foundation
  7. National Institutes of Health [1R21CA138331-01A1, GM076477, DK042303, DK090165]
  8. Hans W. Vahlteich Professorship

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Polyketide natural products constitute a broad class of compounds with diverse structural features and biological activities. Their biosynthetic machinery, represented by type I polyketide synthases (PKSs), has an architecture in which successive modules catalyse two-carbon linear extensions and keto-group processing reactions on intermediates covalently tethered to carrier domains. Here we used electron cryo-microscopy to determine sub-nanometre-resolution three-dimensional reconstructions of a full-length PKS module from the bacterium Streptomyces venezuelae that revealed an unexpectedly different architecture compared to the homologous dimeric mammalian fatty acid synthase. A single reaction chamber provides access to all catalytic sites for the intramodule carrier domain. In contrast, the carrier from the preceding module uses a separate entrance outside the reaction chamber to deliver the upstream polyketide intermediate for subsequent extension and modification. This study reveals for the first time, to our knowledge, the structural basis for both intramodule and intermodule substrate transfer in polyketide synthases, and establishes a new model for molecular dissection of these multifunctional enzyme systems.

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