Abstract

Lasso peptides are unique natural products that comprise a class of ribosomally synthesized and post-translationally modified peptides. Their defining three-dimensional structure is a lariat knot, in which the C-terminal tail is threaded through a macrolactam ring formed between the N-terminal amino group and an Asp or Glu side chain (i.e., an isopeptide bond). Recent genome mining strategies have revealed various types of lasso peptide biosynthetic gene clusters and have thus redefined the known chemical space of lasso peptides. To date, over 20 different types of these gene clusters have been discovered, including several different clades from Proteobacteria. Despite the diverse architectures of these gene clusters, which may or may not encode various tailoring enzymes, most currently known lasso peptides are synthesized by two discrete clades defined by the presence of an ATP-binding cassette transporter or its absence and (sometimes) concurrent appearance of an isopeptidase, raising questions about their evolutionary history. Herein, we discovered and characterized the lasso peptide rubrinodin, which is assembled by a gene cluster encoding both an ATP-binding cassette transporter and an isopeptidase. Our bioinformatics analyses of this and other representative cluster types provided new clues into the evolutionary history of lasso peptides. Furthermore, our structural and biochemical investigations of rubrinodin permitted the conversion of this thermolabile lasso peptide into a more thermostable scaffold.

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