4.8 Article

Sea Urchin Polyketide Synthase SpPks1 Produces the Naphthalene Precursor to Echinoderm Pigments

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JOURNAL OF THE AMERICAN CHEMICAL SOCIETY
卷 144, 期 21, 页码 9363-9371

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AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/jacs.2c01416

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  1. NIH [R35GM122521]

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Nearly every animal species contains a unique polyketide synthase (PKS) encoded in its genome, but their biochemical characteristics and chemical products are still largely unknown. The PKS gene SpPks1 from sea urchins was the first one to be identified. Through biochemical experiments, it was found that SpPks1 is responsible for the synthesis of the precursor to echinochrome. This discovery redefines the biosynthetic pathway to echinoderm pigments.
Nearly every animal species on Earth contains a unique polyketide synthase (PKS) encoded in its genome, yet no animal-clade PKS has been biochemically characterized, and even the chemical products of these ubiquitous enzymes are known in only a few cases. The earliest animal genome-encoded PKS gene to be identified was SpPks1 from sea urchins. Previous genetic knockdown experiments implicated SpPks1 in synthesis of the sea urchin pigment echinochrome. Here, we express and purify SpPks1, performing biochemical experiments to demonstrate that the sea urchin protein is responsible for the synthesis of 2-acetyl-1,3,6,8-tetrahydroxynaphthalene (ATHN). Since ATHN is a plausible precursor of echinochromes, this result defines a biosynthetic pathway to the ubiquitous echinoderm pigments and rewrites the previous hypothesis for echinochrome biosynthesis. Truncation experiments showed that, unlike other type I iterative PKSs so far characterized, SpPks1 produces the naphthalene core using solely ketoacylsynthase (KS), acyltransferase, and acyl carrier protein domains, delineating a unique class of animal nonreducing aromatic PKSs (aPKSs). A series of amino acids in the KS domain define the family and are likely crucial in cyclization activity. Phylogenetic analyses indicate that SpPks1 and its homologs are widespread in echinoderms and their closest relatives, the acorn worms, reinforcing their fundamental importance to echinoderm biology. While the animal microbiome is known to produce aromatic polyketides, this work provides biochemical evidence that animals themselves also harbor ancient, convergent, dedicated pathways to carbocyclic aromatic polyketides. More fundamentally, biochemical analysis of SpPks1 begins to define the vast and unexplored biosynthetic space of the ubiquitous animal PKS family.

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