Menendez N, Nur-e-Alam M, Fischer C, Brana AF, Salas JA, Rohr J,
Mendez C.Deoxysugar transfer during chromomycin A3
biosynthesis in Streptomyces griseus subsp. griseus: new
derivatives with antitumor activity.
Appl Environ Microbiol. 2006 Jan;72(1):167-77.
Departamento de Biología Funcional, Area de Microbiología,
Facultad de Medicina, Universidad de Oviedo, c/ Julián Clavería
s/n, 33006 Oviedo, Spain.
cmendezf@uniovi.es.
Chromomycin A3 is an antitumor drug produced by Streptomyces
griseus subsp. griseus. It consists of a tricyclic aglycone with
two aliphatic side chains and two O-glycosidically linked
saccharide chains, a disaccharide of 4-O-acetyl-D-oliose (sugar
A) and 4-O-methyl-D-oliose (sugar B), and a trisaccharide of D-olivose
(sugar C), D-olivose (sugar D), and 4-O-acetyl-L-chromose B
(sugar E). The chromomycin gene cluster contains four
glycosyltransferase genes (cmmGI, cmmGII, cmmGIII, and cmmGIV),
which were independently inactivated through gene replacement,
generating mutants C60GI, C10GII, C10GIII, and C10GIV. Mutants
C10GIV and C10GIII produced the known compounds
premithramycinone and premithramycin A1, respectively,
indicating the involvement of CmmGIV and CmmGIII in the
sequential transfer of sugars C and D and possibly also of sugar
E of the trisaccharide chain, to the 12a position of the
tetracyclic intermediate premithramycinone. Mutant C10GII
produced two new tetracyclic compounds lacking the disaccharide
chain at the 8 position, named prechromomycin A3 and
prechromomycin A2. All three compounds accumulated by mutant
C60GI were tricyclic and lacked sugar B of the disaccharide
chain, and they were named prechromomycin A4,
4A-O-deacetyl-3A-O-acetyl-prechromomycin A4, and
3A-O-acetyl-prechromomycin A4. CmmGII and CmmGI are therefore
responsible for the formation of the disaccharide chain by
incorporating, in a sequential manner, two D-oliosyl residues to
the 8 position of the biosynthetic intermediate prechromomycin
A3. A biosynthetic pathway is proposed for the glycosylation
events in chromomycin A3 biosynthesis.
PMID: 16391039
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