Abstract

Structure-activity relationship studies show that the phenylisoserinyl moiety of paclitaxel (Taxol) is largely necessary for the effective anticancer activity. Several paclitaxel analogues with a variant isoserinyl side chain have improved pharmaceutical properties versus those of the parent drug. To produce the isoserinyl CoAs as intermediates needed for enzyme catalysis on a semibiosynthetic pathway to paclitaxel analogues, we repurposed the adenylation and thiolation domains (Phe-AT) of a nonribosomal peptide synthetase (TycA) so that they would function as a CoA ligase. Twenty-eight isoserine analogue racemates were synthesized by an established procedure based on the Staudinger [2+2] cycloaddition reaction. Phe-AT converted 16 substituted phenylisoserines, one β-(heteroaryl)isoserine, and one β-(cyclohexyl)isoserine to their corresponding isoserinyl CoAs. We imagine that these CoA thioesters can likely serve as linchpin biosynthetic acyl donors transferred by a 13-O-acyltransferase to a paclitaxel precursor baccatin III to make drug analogues with better efficacy. It was also interesting to find that an active site mutant [Phe-AT (W227S)] turned over 2-pyridylisoserine and the sterically demanding p-methoxyphenylisoserine substrates to their CoA thioesters, while Phe-AT did not. This mutant is promising for further development to make 3-fluoro-2-pyridylisoserinyl CoA, a biosynthetic precursor of the oral pharmaceutical tesetaxel used for gastric cancers.

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