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Dive into the research topics where Carlos Olano is active.

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Featured researches published by Carlos Olano.


Metabolic Engineering | 2008

Improving production of bioactive secondary metabolites in actinomycetes by metabolic engineering

Carlos Olano; Felipe Lombó; Carmen Méndez; José A. Salas

Production of secondary metabolites is a process influenced by several physico-chemical factors including nutrient supply, oxygenation, temperature and pH. These factors have been traditionally controlled and optimized in industrial fermentations in order to enhance metabolite production. In addition, traditional mutagenesis programs have been used by the pharmaceutical industry for strain and production yield improvement. In the last years, the development of recombinant DNA technology has provided new tools for approaching yields improvement by means of genetic manipulation of biosynthetic pathways. These efforts are usually focused in redirecting precursor metabolic fluxes, deregulation of biosynthetic pathways and overexpression of specific enzymes involved in metabolic bottlenecks. In addition, efforts have been made for the heterologous expression of biosynthetic gene clusters in other organisms, looking not only for an increase of production levels but also to speed the process by using rapidly growing and easy to manipulate organisms compared to the producing organism. In this review, we will focus on these genetic approaches as applied to bioactive secondary metabolites produced by actinomycetes.


Marine Drugs | 2009

Antitumor Compounds from Marine Actinomycetes

Carlos Olano; Carmen Méndez; José A. Salas

Chemotherapy is one of the main treatments used to combat cancer. A great number of antitumor compounds are natural products or their derivatives, mainly produced by microorganisms. In particular, actinomycetes are the producers of a large number of natural products with different biological activities, including antitumor properties. These antitumor compounds belong to several structural classes such as anthracyclines, enediynes, indolocarbazoles, isoprenoides, macrolides, non-ribosomal peptides and others, and they exert antitumor activity by inducing apoptosis through DNA cleavage mediated by topoisomerase I or II inhibition, mitochondria permeabilization, inhibition of key enzymes involved in signal transduction like proteases, or cellular metabolism and in some cases by inhibiting tumor-induced angiogenesis. Marine organisms have attracted special attention in the last years for their ability to produce interesting pharmacological lead compounds.


Molecular Microbiology | 1998

Two glycosyltransferases and a glycosidase are involved in oleandomycin modification during its biosynthesis by Streptomyces antibioticus

Luis M. Quirós; Ignacio Aguirrezabalaga; Carlos Olano; Carmen Méndez; José A. Salas

A 5.2 kb region from the oleandomycin gene cluster in Streptomyces antibioticus located between the oleandomycin polyketide synthase gene and sugar biosynthetic genes was cloned. Sequence analysis revealed the presence of three open reading frames (designated oleI, oleN2 and oleR). The oleI gene product resembled glycosyltransferases involved in macrolide inactivation including the oleD product, a previously described glycosyltransferase from S. antibioticus. The oleN2 gene product showed similarities with different aminotransferases involved in the biosynthesis of 6‐deoxyhexoses. The oleR gene product was similar to several glucosidases from different origins. The oleI, oleR and oleD genes were expressed in Streptomyces lividans. OleI and OleD intracellular proteins were partially purified by affinity chromatography in an UDP‐glucuronic acid agarose column and OleR was detected as a major band from the culture supernatant. OleI and OleD showed oleandomycin glycosylating activity but they differ in the pattern of substrate specificity: OleI being much more specific for oleandomycin. OleR showed glycosidase activity converting glycosylated oleandomycin into active oleandomycin. A model is proposed integrating these and previously reported results for intracellular inactivation, secretion and extracellular reactivation of oleandomycin.


Natural Product Reports | 2010

Post-PKS tailoring steps in natural product-producing actinomycetes from the perspective of combinatorial biosynthesis

Carlos Olano; Carmen Méndez; José A. Salas

In recent years, a number of gene clusters involved in the biosynthesis of polyketide compounds have been characterized and the genes have been used for designing and developing novel chemical entities by combinatorial biosynthesis. This review covers the highlights of combinatorial biosynthesis using polyketide-modifying enzymes such as oxidoreductases, group transferases, halogenases, cyclases and deoxysugar biosynthesis enzymes, focusing on those from actinomycetes (with 315 references cited).


Microbial Biotechnology | 2014

Activation and identification of five clusters for secondary metabolites in Streptomyces albus J1074

Carlos Olano; Ignacio García; Aránzazu González; Miriam Rodríguez; Daniel Rozas; Julio Rubio; Marina Sánchez‐Hidalgo; Alfredo F. Braña; Carmen Méndez; José A. Salas

Streptomyces albus J1074 is a streptomycete strain widely used as a host for expression of secondary metabolite gene clusters. Bioinformatic analysis of the genome of this organism predicts the presence of 27 gene clusters for secondary metabolites. We have used three different strategies for the activation of some of these silent/cryptic gene clusters in S. albus J1074: two hybrid polyketide‐non‐ribosomal peptides (PK‐NRP) (antimycin and 6‐epi‐alteramides), a type I PK (candicidin), a non‐ribosomal peptides (NRP) (indigoidine) and glycosylated compounds (paulomycins). By insertion of a strong and constitutive promoter in front of selected genes of two clusters, production of the blue pigment indigoidine and of two novel members of the polycyclic tetramate macrolactam family (6‐epi‐alteramides A and B) was activated. Overexpression of positive regulatory genes from the same organism also activated the biosynthesis of 6‐epi‐alteramides and heterologous expression of the regulatory gene pimM of the pimaricin cluster activated the simultaneous production of candicidins and antimycins, suggesting some kind of cross‐regulation between both clusters. A cluster for glycosylated compounds (paulomycins) was also identified by comparison of the high‐performance liquid chromatography profiles of the wild‐type strain with that of a mutant in which two key enzymes of the cluster were simultaneously deleted.


Antimicrobial Agents and Chemotherapy | 2000

Identification and Expression of Genes Involved in Biosynthesis of l-Oleandrose and Its Intermediate l-Olivose in the Oleandomycin Producer Streptomyces antibioticus

Ignacio Aguirrezabalaga; Carlos Olano; Nerea Allende; Leticia Rodriguez; Alfredo F. Braña; Carmen Méndez; José A. Salas

ABSTRACT A 9.8-kb DNA region from the oleandomycin gene cluster inStreptomyces antibioticus was cloned. Sequence analysis revealed the presence of 8 open reading frames encoding different enzyme activities involved in the biosynthesis of one of the two 2,6-deoxysugars attached to the oleandomycin aglycone:l-oleandrose (the oleW, oleV,oleL, and oleU genes) andd-desosamine (the oleNI and oleTgenes), or of both (the oleS and oleE genes). AStreptomyces albus strain harboring the oleG2glycosyltransferase gene integrated into the chromosome was constructed. This strain was transformed with two different plasmid constructs (pOLV and pOLE) containing a set of genes proposed to be required for the biosynthesis of dTDP-l-olivose and dTDP-l-oleandrose, respectively. Incubation of these recombinant strains with the erythromycin aglycon (erythronolide B) gave rise to two new glycosylated compounds, identified asl-3-O-olivosyl- andl-3-O-oleandrosyl-erythronolide B, indicating that pOLV and pOLE encode all enzyme activities required for the biosynthesis of these two 2,6-dideoxysugars. A pathway is proposed for the biosynthesis of these two deoxysugars in S. antibioticus.


Applied and Environmental Microbiology | 2006

Isolation, Characterization, and Heterologous Expression of the Biosynthesis Gene Cluster for the Antitumor Anthracycline Steffimycin

Sonia Gullón; Carlos Olano; Mohamed S. Abdelfattah; Alfredo F. Braña; Jürgen Rohr; Carmen Méndez; José A. Salas

ABSTRACT The biosynthetic gene cluster for the aromatic polyketide steffimycin of the anthracycline family has been cloned and characterized from “Streptomyces steffisburgensis” NRRL 3193. Sequence analysis of a 42.8-kbp DNA region revealed the presence of 36 open reading frames (ORFs) (one of them incomplete), 24 of which, spanning 26.5 kb, are probably involved in steffimycin biosynthesis. They code for all the activities required for polyketide biosynthesis, tailoring, regulation, and resistance but show no evidence of genes involved in l-rhamnose biosynthesis. The involvement of the cluster in steffimycin biosynthesis was confirmed by expression of a region of about 15 kb containing 15 ORFS, 11 of them forming part of the cluster, in the heterologous host Streptomyces albus, allowing the isolation of a biosynthetic intermediate. In addition, the expression in S. albus of the entire cluster, contained in a region of 34.8 kb, combined with the expression of plasmid pRHAM, directing the biosynthesis of l-rhamnose, led to the production of steffimycin. Inactivation of the stfX gene, coding for a putative cyclase, revealed that this enzymatic activity participates in the cyclization of the fourth ring, making the final steps in the biosynthesis of the steffimycin aglycon similar to those in the biosynthesis of jadomycin or rabelomycin. Inactivation of the stfG gene, coding for a putative glycosyltransferase involved in the attachment of l-rhamnose, allowed the production of a new compound corresponding to the steffimycin aglycon compound also observed in S. albus upon expression of the entire cluster.


Molecular Genetics and Genomics | 1998

Analysis of a Streptomyces antibioticus chromosomal region involved in oleandomycin biosynthesis, which encodes two glycosyltransferases responsible for glycosylation of the macrolactone ring

Carlos Olano; Ana Maria Rodriguez; J.-M. Michel; Carmen Méndez; M.-C. Raynal; J. A. Salas

Abstract A 6-kb region from the chromosome of Streptomyces antibioticus, an oleandomycin producer, was cloned and sequenced. This region was located between the 3′ end of the gene encoding the third subunit of the oleandomycin type I polyketide synthase and the oleP and oleB genes, which encode a cytochrome P450 monooxygenase and an oleandomycin resistance gene, respectively. Analysis of the nucleotide sequence revealed the presence of five genes encoding a cytochrome P450-like protein (oleP1), two glycosyltransferases (oleG1 and oleG2) involved in the transfer of the two 6-deoxysugars (L-oleandrose and D-desosamine) to the oleandomycin macrolactone ring, a methyltransferase (oleM1), and a gene (oleY) of unknown function. Insertional inactivation of this region by gene disruption generated an oleandomycin non-producing mutant which accumulated a compound that, according to mass spectrometry analysis, could correspond to the oleandomycin macrolactone ring (oleandolide), suggesting that the mutation affects oleandrosyl glycosyltransferase.


Molecular Microbiology | 1993

Streptomyces antibioticus contains at least three oleandomycin-resistance determinants, one of which shows similarity with proteins of the ABC-transporter superfamily

Ana Rodríguez; Carlos Olano; Carmen Vilches; Carmen Méndez; José A. Salas

Three different DNA fragments of an oleandomycin producer, Streptomyces antibioticus, conferring oleandomycin resistance were cloned in plasmid pIJ702 and expressed in Streptomyces lividans and in Streptomyces albus. These oleandomycin resistance determinants were designated as oleA (pOR400), oleB (pOR501) and oleC (pOR800). oleA and oleC are closely linked in the chromosome as they were both obtained together in two cosmid clones that were isolated from a genomic library. Sequencing of the oleC resistance determinant revealed four complete open reading frames (ORFs) and the C‐terminal end of a fifth. The functions of orf1 and orf2 are unknown since they did not show significant similarity with other sequences in the data bases. The orf3 gene product has similarity with some proteins involved in iron and vitamin B12 uptake in bacteria. The orf4 gene product had a hydrophilic profile and showed important similarity with proteins containing typical ATP‐binding domains characteristic of the ABC‐transporter superfamily and involved in membrane transport and, particularly, with several genes conferring resistance to various macrolide antibiotics and anticancer drugs. The last gene, orf5, is translationally coupled to orf4 and codes for a hydrophobic polypeptide containing several trans‐membrane domains characteristic of integral membrane proteins. Subcloning and deletion experiments limited the resistance determinant to a 0.9kb Pst1‐Sph1 fragment and only orf4 is included in this fragment. These results suggest that resistance to oleandomycin conferred by oleC (orf4) is probably due to an efflux transport system of the ABC‐transporter superfamily.


Molecular Microbiology | 1995

A second ABC transporter is involved in oleandomycin resistance and its secretion by Streptomyces antibioticus

Carlos Olano; Ana Maria Rodriguez; Carmen Méndez; José A. Salas

A 3.2 kb Sstl‐Sphl DNA fragment of Streptomyces antibioticus, an oleandomycin producer, conferring resistance to oleandomycin was sequenced and found to contain an open reading frame of 1710 bp (oleB). Its deduced gene product (OleB) showed a high degree of similarity with other proteins belonging to the ABC‐transporter superfamily including the gene product of another oleandomycin‐resistance gene (OleC). The OleB protein contains two ATP‐binding domains, each of approximately 200 amino acids in length, and no hydrophobic transmembrane regions. Functional analysis of the oleB gene was carried out by deleting specific regions of the gene and assaying for oleandomycin resistance. These experiments showed that either the first or the second half of the gene containing only one ATP‐binding domain was sufficient to confer resistance to oleandomycin. The gene oleB was expressed in Escherichia coli fused to a maltose‐binding protein (MBP) using the pMal‐c2 vector. The MBP‐OleB hybrid protein was purified by affinity chromatography on an amylose resin and polyclonal antibodies were raised against the fusion protein. These were used to monitor the biosynthesis and physical location of OleB during growth. By Western analysis, the OleB protein was detected both in the soluble and in the membrane fraction and its synthesis paralleled oleandomycin biosynthesis. It was also shown that a Streptomyces albus strain, containing both a glycosyltransferase (OleD) able to inactivate oleandomycin and the OleB protein, was capable of glycosylating oleandomycin and secreting the inactive glycosylated molecule. It is proposed that OleB constitutes the secretion system by which oleandomycin or its inactive glycosylated form could be secreted by S. antibioticus.

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