Abstract

Mycosporine-like amino acids (MAAs) were widespread in diverse organisms to attenuate UV radiation. We recently characterized the large, complicated MAA mycosporine-2-(4-deoxygadusolyl-ornithine) in desert cyanobacterium Nostoc flagelliforme. Synthesis of this MAA requires the five-gene cluster mysABDC2C3. Here, bioinformatic analysis indicated that mysC duplication within five-gene mys clusters is strictly limited to drought-tolerant cyanobacteria. Phylogenic analysis distinguished these duplicated MysCs into two clades that separated from canonical MysCs. Heterologous expression of N. flagelliforme mys genes in Escherichia coli showed that MysAB produces 4-deoxygadusol. The ATP-grasp ligase of MysC3 catalyses the linkage of the δ- or ε-amino group of ornithine/lysine to 4-deoxygadusol, yielding mycosporine-ornithine or mycosporine-lysine respectively. The ATP-grasp ligase of MysC2 strictly condenses the α-amino group of mycosporine-ornithine to another 4-deoxygadusol. MysD (D-Ala-D-Ala ligase) functions following MysC2 to catalyse the formation of mycosporine-2-(4-deoxygadusolyl-ornithine). High arginine content likely provides a greater pool of ornithine over other amino acids during rehydration of desiccated N. flagelliforme. Duplication of ATP-grasp ligases is specific for the use of substrates that have two amino groups (such as ornithine) for the production of complicated MAAs with multiple chromophores. This five-enzyme biosynthesis pathway for complicated MAAs is a novel adaptation of cyanobacteria for UV tolerance in drought environments.

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