July 13, 2015
Journal Article

Spatial regulation of a common precursor from two distinct genes generates metabolite diversity

Abstract

In secondary metabolite biosynthesis, core synthetic genes such as polyketide synthase genes or non-ribosomal peptide synthase genes usually encode proteins that generate various backbone precursors. These precursors are modified by other tailoring enzymes to yield a large variety of different secondary metabolites. The number of core synthesis genes in a given species correlates, therefore, with the number of types of secondary metabolites the organism can produce. In our study, heterologous expression of all the A. terreus NRPS-like genes showed that two NRPS-like proteins, encoded by atmelA and apvA, release the same natural product, aspulvinone E. More interestingly, further experiments revealed that the aspulvinone E produced by two different genes accumulates in different fungal compartments. And this spatial control of aspulvinone E production is likely to be regulated by their own specific promoters. Comparative genomics indicates that atmelA and apvA might share a same ancestral gene and the gene apvA is inserted in a highly conserved region in Aspergillus species that contains genes coding for life-essential proteins. The study also identified one trans-prenyltransferase AbpB which is capable of prenylating two different substrates aspulvinones and butyrolactones. In total, our study shows the first example in which the locally distribution of the same natural product could lead to its incorporation into different SM pathways.

Revised: March 24, 2016 | Published: July 13, 2015

Citation

Guo C., W. Sun, K.S. Bruno, B.R. Oakley, N.P. Keller, and C.C. Wang. 2015. Spatial regulation of a common precursor from two distinct genes generates metabolite diversity. Chemical Science 6, no. 10:5913-5921. PNNL-SA-107520. doi:10.1039/c5sc01058f