4.8 Article

A Trojan-Horse Peptide-Carboxymethyl-Cytidine Antibiotic from Bacillus amyloliquefaciens

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JOURNAL OF THE AMERICAN CHEMICAL SOCIETY
卷 138, 期 48, 页码 15690-15698

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AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/jacs.6b09853

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资金

  1. Russian Foundation of Basic Research [RFBR 15-04-05672]
  2. NIH [R01 AI117210]
  3. Moscow State University [PNG 5.13]
  4. FWO (Flemish Government) [G.0778.14N]
  5. Research Fund KU Leuven [OT/14/105]

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Microcin C and related antibiotics are Trojan horse peptide-adenylates. The peptide part is responsible for facilitated transport inside the sensitive cell, where it gets processed to release a toxic warhead-a nonhydrolyzable aspartyl-adenylate, which inhibits aspartyl-tRNA synthetase. Adenylation of peptide precursors is carried out by MccB THIF-type NAD/FAD adenylyltransferases. Here, we describe a novel microcin C-like compound from Bacillus amyloliquefaciens. The B. amyloliquefaciens MccB demonstrates an unprecedented ability to attach a terminal cytidine mono phosphate to cognate precursor peptide in cellular and cell free systems. The cytosine moiety undergoes an additional modification carboxymethylation that is carried out by the C-terminal domain of MccB and the MccS enzyme that produces carboxy-SAM, which serves as a donor of the carboxymethyl group. We show that microcin C-like compounds carrying terminal cytosines are biologically active and target aspartyl-tRNA synthetase, and that the carboxymethyl group prevents resistance that can occur due to modification of the warhead. The results expand the repertoire of known enzymatic modifications of peptides that can be used to obtain new biological activities while avoiding or limiting bacterial resistance.

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