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Tailoring enzyme-rich environmental DNA clones: A source of enzymes for generating libraries of unnatural natural products

Journal of the American Chemical Society, ISSN: 0002-7863, Vol: 132, Issue: 44, Page: 15661-15670
2010
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Article Description

A detailed bioinformatics analysis of six glycopeptide biosynthetic gene clusters isolated from soil environmental DNA (eDNA) megalibraries indicates that a subset of these gene clusters contains collections of tailoring enzymes that are predicted to result in the production of new glycopeptide congeners. In particular, sulfotransferases appear in eDNA-derived gene clusters at a much higher frequency than would be predicted from the characterization of glycopeptides from cultured Actinomycetes. Enzymes found on tailoring-enzyme- rich eDNA clones associated with these six gene clusters were used to produce a series of new sulfated glycopeptide derivatives in both in vitro and in vivo derivatization studies. The derivatization of known natural products with eDNA-derived tailoring enzymes is likely to be a broadly applicable strategy for generating libraries of new natural product variants. © 2010 American Chemical Society.

Bibliographic Details

Banik, Jacob J.; Craig, Jeffrey W.; Calle, Paula Y.; Brady, Sean F.

American Chemical Society (ACS)

Chemical Engineering; Chemistry; Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology

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