gramicidin-a has been researched along with phenylalanyl-prolyl-diketopiperazine* in 2 studies
2 other study(ies) available for gramicidin-a and phenylalanyl-prolyl-diketopiperazine
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In Vitro Reconstruction of Nonribosomal Peptide Biosynthesis Directly from DNA Using Cell-Free Protein Synthesis.
Genome sequencing has revealed that a far greater number of natural product biosynthetic pathways exist than there are known natural products. To access these molecules directly and deterministically, a new generation of heterologous expression methods is needed. Cell-free protein synthesis has not previously been used to study nonribosomal peptide biosynthesis, and provides a tunable platform with advantages over conventional methods for protein expression. Here, we demonstrate the use of cell-free protein synthesis to biosynthesize a cyclic dipeptide with correct absolute stereochemistry. From a single-pot reaction, we measured the expression of two nonribosomal peptide synthetases larger than 100 kDa, and detected high-level production of a diketopiperazine. Using quantitative LC-MS and synthetically prepared standard, we observed production of this metabolite at levels higher than previously reported from cell-based recombinant expression, approximately 12 mg/L. Overall, this work represents a first step to apply cell-free protein synthesis to discover and characterize new natural products. Topics: Biosynthetic Pathways; Cell-Free System; Chromatography, Liquid; Dipeptides; DNA; Escherichia coli; Gramicidin; In Vitro Techniques; Mass Spectrometry; Peptide Biosynthesis, Nucleic Acid-Independent; Peptide Synthases; Peptides, Cyclic; Piperazines; Synthetic Biology | 2017 |
Absence of pantothenic acid in gramicidin S synthetase 2 obtained from some mutants of Bacillus brevis.
The pantothenic acid content of gramicidin S synthetase 2(GS 2) was estimated microbiologically with enzymes obtained from the wild strain and gramicidin S-lacking mutant strains of Bacillus brevis. Four mutant enzymes from BI-4, C-3, E-1, and E-2 lacked pantothenic acid. Other mutant enzymes from BII-3, BI-3, BI-9, and BI-2 contained the same amount of pantothenic acid as the wild-type enzyme. Pantothenic acid-lacking GS 2 belonged to group V of mutant enzymes, which could activate all amino acids related to gramicidin S; their complementary enzyme, gramicidin S synthetase 1(GS 1), lacked racemizing activity. To ascertain whether 4'-phosphopantetheine is involved in the formation of D-phenylalanyl-L-prolyl diketopiperazine (DKP) and gramicidin S, combinations were tested of intact GS 1 from the wild strain with various mutant GS 2 either containing or lacking pantothenic acid. Only the combinations of wild-type GS 1 with mutant GS 2 containing pantothenic acid could synthesize DKP. Combinations with pantothenic acid-lacking GS 2 also failed to elongate peptide chains. Pantothenic acid-lacking GS 2 could bind the four amino acids which constitute gramicidin S as acyladenylates and thioesters, but the binding abilities were lower than those of the wild-type enzyme and other mutant enzymes containing the pantothenic group. Topics: Amino Acid Isomerases; Amino Acids; Bacillus; Biological Assay; Gramicidin; Lactobacillus; Multienzyme Complexes; Mutation; Pantothenic Acid; Peptide Chain Elongation, Translational; Peptide Synthases; Phenylalanine; Piperazines | 1981 |