Binding of two flaviolin substrate molecules, oxidative coupling, and crystal structure of Streptomyces coelicolor A3(2) cytochrome P450 158A2. (17/441)

Cytochrome P450 158A2 (CYP158A2) is encoded within a three-gene operon (sco1206-sco1208) in the prototypic soil bacterium Streptomyces coelicolor A3(2). This operon is widely conserved among streptomycetes. CYP158A2 has been suggested to produce polymers of flaviolin, a pigment that may protect microbes from UV radiation, in combination with the adjacent rppA gene, which encodes the type III polyketide synthase, 1,3,6,8-tetrahydroxynaphthalene synthase. Following cloning, expression, and purification of this cytochrome P450, we have shown that it can produce dimer and trimer products from the substrate flaviolin and that the structures of two of the dimeric products were established using mass spectrometry and multiple NMR methods. A comparison of the x-ray structures of ligand-free (1.75 angstroms) and flaviolin-bound (1.62 angstroms) forms of CYP158A2 demonstrates a major conformational change upon ligand binding that closes the entry into the active site, partly due to repositioning of the F and G helices. Particularly interesting is the presence of two molecules of flaviolin in the closed active site. The flaviolin molecules form a quasi-planar three-molecule stack including the heme of CYP158A2, suggesting that oxidative C-C coupling of these phenolic molecules leads to the production of flaviolin dimers.  (+info)

Functional analysis of two divalent metal-dependent regulatory genes dmdR1 and dmdR2 in Streptomyces coelicolor and proteome changes in deletion mutants. (18/441)

In Gram-positive bacteria, the expression of iron-regulated genes is mediated by a class of divalent metal-dependent regulatory (DmdR) proteins. We cloned and characterized two dmdR genes of Streptomyces coelicolor that were located in two different nonoverlapping cosmids. Functional analysis of dmdR1 and dmdR2 was performed by deletion of each copy. Deletion of dmdR1 resulted in the derepression of at least eight proteins and in the repression of three others, as shown by 2D proteome analysis. These 11 proteins were characterized by MALDI-TOF peptide mass fingerprinting. The proteins that show an increased level in the mutant correspond to a DNA-binding hemoprotein, iron-metabolism proteins and several divalent metal-regulated enzymes. The levels of two other proteins--a superoxide dismutase and a specific glutamatic dehydrogenase--were found to decrease in this mutant. Complementation of the dmdR1-deletion mutant with the wild-type dmdR1 allele restored the normal proteome profile. By contrast, deletion of dmdR2 did not affect significantly the protein profile of S. coelicolor. One of the proteins (P1, a phosphatidylethanolamine-binding protein), overexpressed in the dmdR1-deleted mutant, is encoded by ORF3 located immediately upstream of dmdR2; expression of both ORF3 and dmdR2 is negatively controlled by DmdR1. Western blot analysis confirmed that dmdR2 is only expressed when dmdR1 is disrupted. Species of Streptomyces have evolved an elaborated regulatory mechanism mediated by the DmdR proteins to control the expression of divalent metal-regulated genes.  (+info)

L-malyl-coenzyme A/beta-methylmalyl-coenzyme A lyase is involved in acetate assimilation of the isocitrate lyase-negative bacterium Rhodobacter capsulatus. (19/441)

Cell extracts of Rhodobacter capsulatus grown on acetate contained an apparent malate synthase activity but lacked isocitrate lyase activity. Therefore, R. capsulatus cannot use the glyoxylate cycle for acetate assimilation, and a different pathway must exist. It is shown that the apparent malate synthase activity is due to the combination of a malyl-coenzyme A (CoA) lyase and a malyl-CoA-hydrolyzing enzyme. Malyl-CoA lyase activity was 20-fold up-regulated in acetate-grown cells versus glucose-grown cells. Malyl-CoA lyase was purified 250-fold with a recovery of 6%. The enzyme catalyzed not only the reversible condensation of glyoxylate and acetyl-CoA to L-malyl-CoA but also the reversible condensation of glyoxylate and propionyl-CoA to beta-methylmalyl-CoA. Enzyme activity was stimulated by divalent ions with preference for Mn(2+) and was inhibited by EDTA. The N-terminal amino acid sequence was determined, and a corresponding gene coding for a 34.2-kDa protein was identified and designated mcl1. The native molecular mass of the purified protein was 195 +/- 20 kDa, indicating a homohexameric composition. A homologous mcl1 gene was found in the genomes of the isocitrate lyase-negative bacteria Rhodobacter sphaeroides and Rhodospirillum rubrum in similar genomic environments. For Streptomyces coelicolor and Methylobacterium extorquens, mcl1 homologs are located within gene clusters implicated in acetate metabolism. We therefore propose that L-malyl-CoA/beta-methylmalyl-CoA lyase encoded by mcl1 is involved in acetate assimilation by R. capsulatus and possibly other glyoxylate cycle-negative bacteria.  (+info)

Light-induced carotenogenesis in Streptomyces coelicolor A3(2): identification of an extracytoplasmic function sigma factor that directs photodependent transcription of the carotenoid biosynthesis gene cluster. (20/441)

Carotenoids are produced by a variety of organisms, but the mechanisms that regulate gene expression leading to carotenoid biosynthesis have been characterized for only a few organisms. In this study, we found that Streptomyces coelicolor A3(2), a gram-positive filamentous bacterium, produces carotenoids under blue light induction. The carotenoid fraction isolated from the cell extract contained multiple compounds, including isorenieratene and beta-carotene. The carotenoid biosynthesis gene cluster of S. coelicolor consists of two convergent operons, crtEIBV and crtYTU, as previously shown for Streptomyces griseus. The crtEIBV null mutant completely lost its ability to produce carotenoids. The crt gene cluster is flanked by a regulatory region that consists of two divergent operons, litRQ and litSAB. The lit (light-induced transcription) genes encode a MerR-type transcriptional regulator (LitR), a possible oxidoreductase (LitQ), an extracytoplasmic function sigma factor (sigmaLitS), a putative lipoprotein (LitA), and a putative anti-sigma factor (LitB). S1 protection assay revealed that the promoters preceding crtE (PcrtE), crtY (PcrtY), litR (PlitR), and litS (PlitS) are activated upon illumination. A litS mutant lost both the ability to produce carotenoids and the activities of PcrtE, PcrtY, and PlitS, which suggested that sigmaLitS directs light-induced transcription from these promoters. An RNA polymerase holocomplex containing purified sigmaLitS recombinant protein generated specific PcrtE and PcrtY transcripts in an in vitro runoff transcriptional assay. A litR mutant that had an insertion of the kanamycin resistance gene was defective both in the ability to produce carotenoids and in all of the light-dependent promoter activities. Overexpression of litS resulted in constitutive carotenoid production in both the wild type and the litR mutant. These results indicate that sigmaLitS acts as a light-induced sigma factor that directs transcription of the crt biosynthesis gene cluster, whose activity is controlled by an unknown LitR function. This is the first report to describe light-inducible gene expression in Streptomyces.  (+info)

New prodiginines from a ketosynthase swap. (21/441)

The prodiginine antibiotics exhibit antitumor and immunosuppressive activity. In this issue of Chemistry & Biology, Reynolds and coworkers demonstrate that new prodiginines can be obtained by substituting a FabH ketosynthase for the RedP ketosynthase in the undecylprodiginine biosynthetic gene cluster.  (+info)

Production of branched-chain alkylprodiginines in S. coelicolor by replacement of the 3-ketoacyl ACP synthase III initiation enzyme, RedP. (22/441)

The enzyme RedP is thought to initiate the biosynthesis of the undecylpyrolle component of the antibiotic undecylprodiginine produced by Streptomyces coelicolor. RedP has homology to FabH, which initiates fatty acid biosynthesis by condensing the appropriate acyl-CoA starter unit with malonyl ACP. We have generated a redP-deletion mutant of S. coelicolor M511 (SJM1) and shown that it produces reduced levels of prodiginines and two new analogs, methylundecylprodiginine and methyldodecylprodiginine. Incorporation studies with perdeuterated valine were consistent with these being generated using methylbutyryl-CoA and isobutyryl-CoA as starter units, respectively. Plasmid-based expression of a streptomycete fabH in the SJM1 mutant led to restoration of overall prodiginine titers but the same overall ratio of undecylprodiginines and novel prodiginines. Thus, the redP FabH can be replaced by FabH enzymes with different substrate specificities and provides a method for generating novel prodiginines.  (+info)

Environmental DNA fragment conferring early and increased sporulation and antibiotic production in Streptomyces species. (23/441)

Here we describe the rep gene, isolated from an environmental DNA library, which when transformed into Streptomyces species resulted in increased production of secondary metabolites and accelerated sporulation. We show that Streptomyces lividans strains bearing rep are particularly useful as expression hosts for heterologous antibiotic production.  (+info)

The interplay of glycogen metabolism and differentiation provides an insight into the developmental biology of Streptomyces coelicolor. (24/441)

Mycelial colonies of the developmentally complex actinomycete Streptomyces coelicolor growing on solid medium contain glycogen in two distinct locations. Phase I deposits are found in a substrate mycelium region bordering the developing aerial mycelium. Their production involves GlgBI, one of two glycogen branching enzyme isoforms. Phase II deposits occur in the upper regions of aerial hyphae, in long tip cells that are dividing, or have just divided, into unigenomic prespore compartments. Their formation involves a second branching enzyme isoform, GlgBII. To find out if the gene for the second isoform, glgBII, is regulated by any of the well-studied whiA, B, G, H or I genes needed for sporulation septation, glgBI or glgBII was disrupted in a set of whi mutants, and the glycogen phenotypes examined by transmission electron microscopy. In the whiG mutants, deposits were found throughout the aerial mycelium and the adjacent region of the substrate mycelium, but the morphology of all the deposits, i.e. whether they were in the form of granules of branched glycogen or large blobs of unbranched glycan, depended solely on GlgBI. In contrast, the whiA, B, H and I mutations had no obvious effect on the pattern of glycogen deposition, or on the spatial specificity of the branching enzyme isoforms (though phase II glycogen deposits were reduced in size and abundance in the whiA and B mutants, and increased in the whiH mutant). These results indicate that glgBII is regulated (directly or indirectly) by whiG, and not by any of the other whi genes tested, and that the aerial hyphae of a whiG mutant are atypical in being physiologically similar to the substrate hyphae from which they emerge. A new role for aerial hyphae is proposed.  (+info)