Expanding the Bioactive Chemical Space of Anthrabenzoxocinones through Engineering the Highly Promiscuous Biosynthetic Modification Steps

  • Xianyi Mei
  • , Xiaoli Yan
  • , Hui Zhang
  • , Mingjia Yu
  • , Guangqing Shen
  • , Linjun Zhou
  • , Zixin Deng
  • , Chun Lei*
  • , Xudong Qu
  • *Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

Anthrabenzoxocinones (ABXs) including (-)-ABXs and (+)-ABXs are a group of bacterial FabF-specific inhibitors with potent antimicrobial activity of resistant strains. Optimization of their chemical structures is a promising method to develop potent antibiotics. Through biosynthetic investigation, we herein identified and characterized two highly promiscuous enzymes involved in the (-)-ABX structural modification. The promiscuous halogenase and methyltransferase can respectively introduce halogen-modifications into various positions of the ABX scaffolds and methylation to highly diverse substrates. Manipulation of their activity in both of the (-)-ABXs and (+)-ABXs biosyntheses led to the generation of 14 novel ABX analogues of both enantiomers. Bioactivity assessment revealed that a few of the analogues showed significantly improved antimicrobial activity, with the C3-hydroxyl and chlorine substitutions critical for their activity. This study enormously expands the bioactive chemical space of the ABX family and FabF-specific inhibitors. The disclosed broad-selective biosynthetic machineries and structure-activity relationship provide a solid basis for further generation of potent antimicrobial agents.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)200-206
Number of pages7
JournalACS Chemical Biology
Volume13
Issue number1
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 19 Jan 2018
Externally publishedYes

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