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Metabolic engineering of Streptomyces peucetius for biosynthesis of N,N-dimethylated anthracyclines

Hulst Mandy B.; Zhang Le; van der Heul Helga U.; Du Chao; Elsayed Somayah S.; Koroleva Arina; Grocholski Thadee; Wander Dennis P. A.; Metsa-Ketela Mikko; Neefjes Jacques J. C.; van Wezel Gilles P.

Metabolic engineering of Streptomyces peucetius for biosynthesis of N,N-dimethylated anthracyclines

Hulst Mandy B.
Zhang Le
van der Heul Helga U.
Du Chao
Elsayed Somayah S.
Koroleva Arina
Grocholski Thadee
Wander Dennis P. A.
Metsa-Ketela Mikko
Neefjes Jacques J. C.
van Wezel Gilles P.
Katso/Avaa
fbioe-12-1363803.pdf (2.830Mb)
Lataukset: 

Frontiers Media S.A.
doi:10.3389/fbioe.2024.1363803
URI
https://www.frontiersin.org/articles/10.3389/fbioe.2024.1363803/full
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Julkaisun pysyvä osoite on:
https://urn.fi/URN:NBN:fi-fe2025082789194
Tiivistelmä

Introduction: Daunorubicin and doxorubicin, two anthracycline polyketides produced by S. peucetius, are potent anticancer agents that are widely used in chemotherapy, despite severe side effects. Recent advances have highlighted the potential of producing improved derivatives with reduced side effects by incorporating l-rhodosamine, the N,N-dimethyl analogue of the native amino sugar moiety.

Method: In this study, we aimed to produce N,N-dimethylated anthracyclines by engineering the doxorubicin biosynthetic pathway in the industrial Streptomyces peucetius strain G001. To achieve this, we introduced genes from the aclarubicin biosynthetic pathway encoding the sugar N-methyltransferases AclP and AknX2. Furthermore, the native gene for glycosyltransferase DnrS was replaced with genes encoding the aclarubicin glycosyltransferases AknS and AknT. Additionally, the gene for methylesterase RdmC from the rhodomycin biosynthetic pathway was introduced.

Results: A new host was engineered successfully, whereby genes from the aclarubicin pathway were introduced and expressed. LC-MS/MS analysis of the engineered strains showed that dimethylated sugars were efficiently produced, and that these were incorporated ino the anthracycline biosynthetic pathway to produce the novel dimethylated anthracycline N,N-dimethyldaunorubicin. Further downstream tailoring steps catalysed by the cytochrome P450 monooxygenase DoxA exhibited limited efficacy with N,N-dimethylated substrates. This resulted in only low production levels of N,N-dimethyldaunorubicin and no N,N-dimethyldoxorubicin, most likely due to the low affinity of DoxA for dimethylated substrates.

Discussion: S. peucetius G001 was engineered such as to produce N,N-dimethylated sugars, which were incorporated into the biosynthetic pathway. This allowed the successful production of N,N-dimethyldaunorubicin, an anticancer drug with reduced cytotoxicity. DoxA is the key enzyme that determines the efficiency of the biosynthesis of N,N-dimethylated anthracyclines, and engineering of this enzyme will be a major step forwards towards the efficient production of more N,N-dimethylated anthracyclines, including N,N-dimethyldoxorubicin. This study provides valuable insights into the biosynthesis of clinically relevant daunorubicin derivatives, highlighting the importance of combinatorial biosynthesis.

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