Functional biosynthetic stereodivergence in a gene cluster via a dihydrosydnone N-oxide

Abstract Chirality plays a critical role in the biochemistry of life and often only one enantiomeric series is observed (homochirality). Only a few natural products have been obtained as racemates, e.g. the signalling molecule valdiazen produced by Burkholderia cenocepacia H111. In this study, we in...

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Main Authors: Jiajun Ren, Anugraha Mathew, María Rodríguez-García, Tobias Kohler, Olivier Blacque, Anthony Linden, Leo Eberl, Simon Sieber, Karl Gademann
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Nature Portfolio 2024-12-01
Series:Communications Chemistry
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1038/s42004-024-01372-3
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author Jiajun Ren
Anugraha Mathew
María Rodríguez-García
Tobias Kohler
Olivier Blacque
Anthony Linden
Leo Eberl
Simon Sieber
Karl Gademann
author_facet Jiajun Ren
Anugraha Mathew
María Rodríguez-García
Tobias Kohler
Olivier Blacque
Anthony Linden
Leo Eberl
Simon Sieber
Karl Gademann
author_sort Jiajun Ren
collection DOAJ
description Abstract Chirality plays a critical role in the biochemistry of life and often only one enantiomeric series is observed (homochirality). Only a few natural products have been obtained as racemates, e.g. the signalling molecule valdiazen produced by Burkholderia cenocepacia H111. In this study, we investigated the ham biosynthetic gene cluster and discovered that both the enantiomerically pure (R)-fragin and the racemic valdiazen result from the same pathway. This stereodivergence is based on the unusual heterocyclic intermediate dihydrosydnone N-oxide, as evident from gene knockout, stable isotope feeding experiments, and mass spectrometry experiments. Both non-enzymatic racemisation via keto-enol tautomerisation and enzyme-mediated dynamic kinetic resolution were found to be crucial to this stereodivergent pathway. This novel mechanism underpins the production of configurationally and biologically distinct metabolites from a single gene cluster. Our findings highlight the intricate design of an intertwined biosynthetic pathway and provide a deeper understanding of microbial secondary metabolism related to microbial communication.
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institution Kabale University
issn 2399-3669
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publishDate 2024-12-01
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spelling doaj-art-a37898d17ff14233b2169ff8f97deafe2024-12-22T12:19:58ZengNature PortfolioCommunications Chemistry2399-36692024-12-01711910.1038/s42004-024-01372-3Functional biosynthetic stereodivergence in a gene cluster via a dihydrosydnone N-oxideJiajun Ren0Anugraha Mathew1María Rodríguez-García2Tobias Kohler3Olivier Blacque4Anthony Linden5Leo Eberl6Simon Sieber7Karl Gademann8Department of Chemistry, University of ZurichDepartment of Plant and Microbial Biology, University of ZurichDepartment of Plant and Microbial Biology, University of ZurichDepartment of Chemistry, University of ZurichDepartment of Chemistry, University of ZurichDepartment of Chemistry, University of ZurichDepartment of Plant and Microbial Biology, University of ZurichDepartment of Chemistry, University of ZurichDepartment of Chemistry, University of ZurichAbstract Chirality plays a critical role in the biochemistry of life and often only one enantiomeric series is observed (homochirality). Only a few natural products have been obtained as racemates, e.g. the signalling molecule valdiazen produced by Burkholderia cenocepacia H111. In this study, we investigated the ham biosynthetic gene cluster and discovered that both the enantiomerically pure (R)-fragin and the racemic valdiazen result from the same pathway. This stereodivergence is based on the unusual heterocyclic intermediate dihydrosydnone N-oxide, as evident from gene knockout, stable isotope feeding experiments, and mass spectrometry experiments. Both non-enzymatic racemisation via keto-enol tautomerisation and enzyme-mediated dynamic kinetic resolution were found to be crucial to this stereodivergent pathway. This novel mechanism underpins the production of configurationally and biologically distinct metabolites from a single gene cluster. Our findings highlight the intricate design of an intertwined biosynthetic pathway and provide a deeper understanding of microbial secondary metabolism related to microbial communication.https://doi.org/10.1038/s42004-024-01372-3
spellingShingle Jiajun Ren
Anugraha Mathew
María Rodríguez-García
Tobias Kohler
Olivier Blacque
Anthony Linden
Leo Eberl
Simon Sieber
Karl Gademann
Functional biosynthetic stereodivergence in a gene cluster via a dihydrosydnone N-oxide
Communications Chemistry
title Functional biosynthetic stereodivergence in a gene cluster via a dihydrosydnone N-oxide
title_full Functional biosynthetic stereodivergence in a gene cluster via a dihydrosydnone N-oxide
title_fullStr Functional biosynthetic stereodivergence in a gene cluster via a dihydrosydnone N-oxide
title_full_unstemmed Functional biosynthetic stereodivergence in a gene cluster via a dihydrosydnone N-oxide
title_short Functional biosynthetic stereodivergence in a gene cluster via a dihydrosydnone N-oxide
title_sort functional biosynthetic stereodivergence in a gene cluster via a dihydrosydnone n oxide
url https://doi.org/10.1038/s42004-024-01372-3
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