Abstract

Polyketides are a class of specialised metabolites synthesised by both eukaryotes and prokaryotes. These chemically and structurally diverse molecules are heavily used in the clinic and include frontline antimicrobial and anticancer drugs such as erythromycin and doxorubicin. To replenish the clinicians’ diminishing arsenal of bioactive molecules, a promising strategy aims at transferring polyketide biosynthetic pathways from their native producers into the biotechnologically desirable host Escherichia coli. This approach has been successful for type I modular polyketide synthases (PKSs); however, despite more than 3 decades of research, the large and important group of type II PKSs has until now been elusive in E. coli. Here, we report on a versatile polyketide biosynthesis pipeline, based on identification of E. coli–compatible type II PKSs. We successfully express 5 ketosynthase (KS) and chain length factor (CLF) pairs—e.g., from Photorhabdus luminescens TT01, Streptomyces resistomycificus, Streptoccocus sp. GMD2S, Pseudoalteromonas luteoviolacea, and Ktedonobacter racemifer—as soluble heterodimeric recombinant proteins in E. coli for the first time. We define the anthraquinone minimal PKS components and utilise this biosynthetic system to synthesise anthraquinones, dianthrones, and benzoisochromanequinones (BIQs). Furthermore, we demonstrate the tolerance and promiscuity of the anthraquinone heterologous biosynthetic pathway in E. coli to act as genetically applicable plug-and-play scaffold, showing it to function successfully when combined with enzymes from phylogenetically distant species, endophytic fungi and plants, which resulted in 2 new-to-nature compounds, neomedicamycin and neochaetomycin. This work enables plug-and-play combinatorial biosynthesis of aromatic polyketides using bacterial type II PKSs in E. coli, providing full access to its many advantages in terms of easy and fast genetic manipulation, accessibility for high-throughput robotics, and convenient biotechnological scale-up. Using the synthetic and systems biology toolbox, this plug-and-play biosynthetic platform can serve as an engine for the production of new and diversified bioactive polyketides in an automated, rapid, and versatile fashion.

Highlights

  • Natural products and their synthetic derivatives provide important clinically used therapeutic agents, accounting for 73% of antibacterial agents and 83% of anticancer agents approved by the Food and Drug Administration between 1981 and 2014 [1]

  • KS sequences were chosen to search for homologues, because these represent the catalytic part of the minimal polyketide synthase (mPKS) protein dimer and are more similar to FabF than the passive, and typically more sequence diverse, chain length factor (CLF)

  • We show that bacterial PKSII systems can be successfully refactored in E. coli

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Summary

Introduction

Natural products and their synthetic derivatives provide important clinically used therapeutic agents, accounting for 73% of antibacterial agents and 83% of anticancer agents approved by the Food and Drug Administration between 1981 and 2014 [1]. Polyketides represent a central class of these natural products, with remarkably targeted and potent pharmacological properties and highly diverse chemical structures Their native biological role is still debated, polyketides continue to have significant medical value as potent antitumor agents, antibiotics, immunosuppressants, antiparasitics, and cholesterol-lowering agents, among other applications [2]. The polyketide biosynthesis machinery is highly modular at the genetic, enzymatic, and chemical level [4] This intrinsic modularity of polyketide synthases (PKSs) was a key motivation behind classical approaches to derivatisation of natural products, and for the same reason PKSs have been favorite targets for the recent pathway engineering and natural product derivatisation renaissance using synthetic biology [5]

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