Abstract

The class II lanthipeptide mersacidin, a ribosomally synthesized and post-translationally modified peptide (RiPP), displays unique intramolecular structures, including a very small lanthionine ring. When applied in the growing field of RiPP engineering, these can add unique features to new-to-nature compounds with novel properties. Recently, a heterologous expression system for mersacidin in Escherichia coli was developed to add its modification enzymes to the RiPP engineering toolbox and further explore mersacidin biosynthesis and leader-processing. The dedicated mersacidin transporter and leader protease MrsT was shown to cleave the leader peptide only partially upon export, transporting GDMEAA-mersacidin out of the cell. The extracellular Bacillus amyloliquefaciens protease AprE was shown to release active mersacidin in a second leader-processing step after transport. The conserved LanT cleavage site in the mersacidin leader is present in many other class II lanthipeptides. In contrast to mersacidin, the leader of these peptides is fully processed in one step. This difference with mersacidin leader-processing raises fundamentally interesting questions about the specifics of mersacidin modification and processing, which is also crucial for its application in RiPP engineering. Here, mutational studies of the mersacidin leader–core interface were performed to answer these questions. Results showed the GDMEAA sequence is crucial for both mersacidin modification and leader processing, revealing a unique leader layout in which a LanM recognition site is positioned downstream of the conserved leader-protease LanT cleavage site. Moreover, by identifying residues and regions that are crucial for mersacidin-type modifications, the wider application of mersacidin modifications in RiPP engineering has been enabled.

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