4.8 Article

Accessing Diverse Pyridine-Based Macrocyclic Peptides by a Two-Site Recognition Pathway

Journal

JOURNAL OF THE AMERICAN CHEMICAL SOCIETY
Volume 144, Issue 25, Pages 11263-11269

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/jacs.2c02824

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Howard Hughes Medical Institute
  2. National Institutes of Health [GM097142]
  3. Chemistry-Biology Interface Research Training Program [GM070421]
  4. Seemon Pines Fellowship from the Department of Chemistry at the University of Illinois
  5. National Science Foundation Graduate Research Fellowship Program [DGE 21-46756]

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In this study, a method for enzymatic synthesis of pyridine-based macrocyclic peptides from linear precursor peptides is reported. It is demonstrated that the pyritide-forming enzymes recognize both the leader region and a C-terminal tripeptide motif, allowing for the generation of a wide range of pyritide analogues. This approach provides a broad substrate scope for the discovery and optimization of macrocyclic peptides.
Macrocyclic peptides are sought-after molecular scaffolds for drug discovery, and new methods to access diverse libraries are of increasing interest. Here, we report the enzymatic synthesis of pyridine-based macrocyclic peptides (pyritides) from linear precursor peptides. Pyritides are a recently described class of ribosomally synthesized and post-translationally modified peptides (RiPPs) and are related to the long-known thiopeptide natural products. RiPP precursors typically contain an N-terminal leader region that is physically engaged by the biosynthetic proteins that catalyze modification of the C-terminal core region of the precursor peptide. We demonstrate that pyritide-forming enzymes recognize both the leader region and a C-terminal tripeptide motif, with each contributing to site-selective substrate modification. Substitutions in the core region were well-tolerated and facilitated the generation of a wide range of pyritide analogues, with variations in macrocycle sequence and size. A combination of the pyritide biosynthetic pathway with azole-forming enzymes was utilized to generate a thiazole-containing pyritide (historically known as a thiopeptide) with no similarity in sequence and macrocycle size to the naturally encoded pyritides. The broad substrate scope of the pyritide biosynthetic enzymes serves as a future platform for macrocyclic peptide lead discovery and optimization.

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