4.4 Article

Characterization of a Copper-Chelating Natural Product from the Methanotroph Methylosinus sp. LW3

Journal

BIOCHEMISTRY
Volume 60, Issue 38, Pages 2845-2850

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acs.biochem.1c00443

Keywords

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Funding

  1. National Institutes of Health [R35 GM118035, F32 GM131665, P41 GM108569]
  2. National Science Foundation GRFP

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Methanobactins are ribosomally produced peptidic natural products that bind copper with high affinity, originating from methanotrophic bacteria to acquire copper needed for enzymatic methane oxidation. They have unique structures and provide support for the proposed role of unknown biosynthetic enzymes.
Methanobactins (Mbns) are ribosomally produced, post-translationally modified peptidic natural products that bind copper with high affinity. Methanotrophic bacteria use Mbns to acquire copper needed for enzymatic methane oxidation. Despite the presence of Mbn operons in a range of methanotroph and other bacterial genomes, few Mbns have been isolated and structurally characterized. Here we report the isolation of a novel Mbn from the methanotroph Methylosinus (Ms.) sp. LW3. Mass spectrometric and nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopic data indicate that this Mbn, the largest characterized to date, consists of a 13-amino acid backbone modified to include pyrazinedione/oxazolone rings and neighboring thioamide groups derived from cysteine residues. The pyrazinedione ring is more stable to acid hydrolysis than the oxazolone ring and likely protects the Mbn from degradation. The structure corresponds exactly to that predicted on the basis of the Ms. sp. LW3 Mbn operon content, providing support for the proposed role of an uncharacterized biosynthetic enzyme, MbnF, and expanding the diversity of known Mbns.

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