Network


Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where Clive Waldron is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by Clive Waldron.


Chemistry & Biology | 2001

Cloning and analysis of the spinosad biosynthetic gene cluster of Saccharopolyspora spinosa1

Clive Waldron; Patti Matsushima; Paul Robert Rosteck; Mary C. Broughton; Jan R. Turner; Krishnamurthy Madduri; Kathryn P. Crawford; Donald J. Merlo; Richard H. Baltz

BACKGROUND Spinosad is a mixture of novel macrolide secondary metabolites produced by Saccharopolyspora spinosa. It is used in agriculture as a potent insect control agent with exceptional safety to non-target organisms. The cloning of the spinosyn biosynthetic gene cluster provides the starting materials for the molecular genetic manipulation of spinosad yields, and for the production of novel derivatives containing alterations in the polyketide core or in the attached sugars. RESULTS We cloned the spinosad biosynthetic genes by molecular probing, complementation of blocked mutants, and cosmid walking, and sequenced an 80 kb region. We carried out gene disruptions of some of the genes and analyzed the mutants for product formation and for the bioconversion of intermediates in the spinosyn pathway. The spinosyn gene cluster contains five large open reading frames that encode a multifunctional, multi-subunit type I polyketide synthase (PKS). The PKS cluster is flanked on one side by genes involved in the biosynthesis of the amino sugar forosamine, in O-methylations of rhamnose, in sugar attachment to the polyketide, and in polyketide cross-bridging. Genes involved in the early common steps in the biosynthesis of forosamine and rhamnose, and genes dedicated to rhamnose biosynthesis, were not located in the 80 kb cluster. CONCLUSIONS Most of the S. spinosa genes involved in spinosyn biosynthesis are found in one 74 kb cluster, though it does not contain all of the genes required for the essential deoxysugars. Characterization of the clustered genes suggests that the spinosyns are synthesized largely by mechanisms similar to those used to assemble complex macrolides in other actinomycetes. However, there are several unusual genes in the spinosyn cluster that could encode enzymes that generate the most striking structural feature of these compounds, a tetracyclic polyketide aglycone nucleus.


Archive | 2001

Research PaperCloning and analysis of the spinosad biosynthetic gene cluster of Saccharopolyspora spinosa1

Clive Waldron; Patti Matsushima; Paul Robert Rosteck; Mary C. Broughton; Jan R. Turner; Krishnamurthy Madduri; Kathryn P. Crawford; Donald J. Merlo; Richard H. Baltz

BACKGROUND Spinosad is a mixture of novel macrolide secondary metabolites produced by Saccharopolyspora spinosa. It is used in agriculture as a potent insect control agent with exceptional safety to non-target organisms. The cloning of the spinosyn biosynthetic gene cluster provides the starting materials for the molecular genetic manipulation of spinosad yields, and for the production of novel derivatives containing alterations in the polyketide core or in the attached sugars. RESULTS We cloned the spinosad biosynthetic genes by molecular probing, complementation of blocked mutants, and cosmid walking, and sequenced an 80 kb region. We carried out gene disruptions of some of the genes and analyzed the mutants for product formation and for the bioconversion of intermediates in the spinosyn pathway. The spinosyn gene cluster contains five large open reading frames that encode a multifunctional, multi-subunit type I polyketide synthase (PKS). The PKS cluster is flanked on one side by genes involved in the biosynthesis of the amino sugar forosamine, in O-methylations of rhamnose, in sugar attachment to the polyketide, and in polyketide cross-bridging. Genes involved in the early common steps in the biosynthesis of forosamine and rhamnose, and genes dedicated to rhamnose biosynthesis, were not located in the 80 kb cluster. CONCLUSIONS Most of the S. spinosa genes involved in spinosyn biosynthesis are found in one 74 kb cluster, though it does not contain all of the genes required for the essential deoxysugars. Characterization of the clustered genes suggests that the spinosyns are synthesized largely by mechanisms similar to those used to assemble complex macrolides in other actinomycetes. However, there are several unusual genes in the spinosyn cluster that could encode enzymes that generate the most striking structural feature of these compounds, a tetracyclic polyketide aglycone nucleus.


Journal of Bacteriology | 2001

Rhamnose Biosynthesis Pathway Supplies Precursors for Primary and Secondary Metabolism in Saccharopolyspora spinosa

Krishnamurthy Madduri; Clive Waldron; Donald J. Merlo

Rhamnose is an essential component of the insect control agent spinosad. However, the genes coding for the four enzymes involved in rhamnose biosynthesis in Saccharopolyspora spinosa are located in three different regions of the genome, all unlinked to the cluster of other genes that are required for spinosyn biosynthesis. Disruption of any of the rhamnose genes resulted in mutants with highly fragmented mycelia that could survive only in media supplemented with an osmotic stabilizer. It appears that this single set of genes provides rhamnose for cell wall synthesis as well as for secondary metabolite production. Duplicating the first two genes of the pathway caused a significant improvement in the yield of spinosyn fermentation products.


Journal of Industrial Microbiology & Biotechnology | 2001

Genes for the biosynthesis of spinosyns: applications for yield improvement in Saccharopolyspora spinosa.

Krishnamurthy Madduri; Clive Waldron; Patti Matsushima; Mary C. Broughton; Kathryn P. Crawford; Donald J. Merlo; Richard H. Baltz

Spinosyns A and D are the active ingredients in an insect control agent produced by fermentation of Saccharopolyspora spinosa. Spinosyns are macrolides with a 21-carbon, tetracyclic lactone backbone to which the deoxysugars forosamine and tri-O-methylrhamnose are attached. The spinosyn biosynthesis genes, except for the rhamnose genes, are located in a cluster that spans 74 kb of the S. spinosa genome. DNA sequence analysis, targeted gene disruptions and bioconversion studies identified five large genes encoding type I polyketide synthase subunits, and 14 genes involved in sugar biosynthesis, sugar attachment to the polyketide or cross-bridging of the polyketide. Four rhamnose biosynthetic genes, two of which are also necessary for forosamine biosynthesis, are located outside the spinosyn gene cluster. Duplication of the spinosyn genes linked to the polyketide synthase genes stimulated the final step in the biosynthesis — the conversion of the forosamine-less pseudoaglycones to endproducts. Duplication of genes involved in the early steps of deoxysugar biosynthesis increased spinosyn yield significantly. Journal of Industrial Microbiology & Biotechnology (2001) 27, 399–402.


Journal of Industrial Microbiology & Biotechnology | 2006

Butenyl-spinosyns, a natural example of genetic engineering of antibiotic biosynthetic genes

Donald R. Hahn; Gary D. Gustafson; Clive Waldron; Brian Bullard; James D. Jackson; Jon C. Mitchell

Spinosyns, a novel class of insect active macrolides produced by Saccharopolyspora spinosa, are used for insect control in a number of commercial crops. Recently, a new class of spinosyns was discovered from S. pogona NRRL 30141. The butenyl-spinosyns, also called pogonins, are very similar to spinosyns, differing in the length of the side chain at C-21 and in the variety of novel minor factors. The butenyl-spinosyn biosynthetic genes (bus) were cloned on four cosmids covering a contiguous 110-kb region of the NRRL 30141 chromosome. Their function in butenyl-spinosyn biosynthesis was confirmed by a loss-of-function deletion, and subsequent complementation by cloned genes. The coding sequences of the butenyl-spinosyn biosynthetic genes and the spinosyn biosynthetic genes from S. spinosa were highly conserved. In particular, the PKS-coding genes from S. spinosa and S. pogona have 91–94% nucleic acid identity, with one notable exception. The butenyl-spinosyn gene sequence codes for one additional PKS module, which is responsible for the additional two carbons in the C-21 tail. The DNA sequence of spinosyn genes in this region suggested that the S. spinosaspnA gene could have been the result of an in-frame deletion of the S. pogona busA gene. Therefore, the butenyl-spinosyn genes represent the putative parental gene structure that was naturally engineered by deletion to create the spinosyn genes.


Antonie Van Leeuwenhoek International Journal of General and Molecular Microbiology | 2000

A cluster of genes for the biosynthesis of spinosyns, novel macrolide insect control agents produced by Saccharopolyspora spinosa.

Clive Waldron; Krishnamurthy Madduri; Kathryn P. Crawford; Donald J. Merlo; Patti Jean Treadway; Mary C. Broughton; Richard H. Baltz

Spinosyns A and D are the active ingredients in a family of insect control agents produced by fermentation of Saccharopolyspora spinosa. Spinosyns are 21–carbon tetracyclic lactones to which are attached two deoxysugars. Most of the genes involved in spinosyn biosynthesis are clustered in an 74 kb region of the S. spinosa genome. This region has been characterized by DNA sequence analysis and by targeted gene disruptions. The spinosyn biosynthetic gene cluster contains five large genes encoding a type I polyketide synthase, and 14 genes involved in modification of the macrolactone, or in the synthesis, modification and attachment of the deoxysugars. Four genes required for rhamnose biosynthesis (two of which are also required for forosamine biosynthesis) are not present in the cluster. A pathway for the biosynthesis of spinosyns is proposed.


Current Genetics | 1996

IDENTIFICATION OF A NEW ANTIFUNGAL TARGET SITE THROUGH A DUAL BIOCHEMICAL AND MOLECULAR-GENETICS APPROACH

Gary D. Gustafson; George Davis; Clive Waldron; Annie O. Smith; Matthew J. Henry

Abstract The target site of the antifungal compound LY214352 [8-chloro-4-(2-chloro-4-fluorophenoxy) quinoline] has been identified through a dual biochemical and molecular-genetics approach. In the molecular-genetics approach, a cosmid library was prepared from an Aspergillus nidulans mutant that was resistant to LY214352 because of a dominant mutation in a single gene. A single cosmid (6A6-6) that could transform an LY214352-sensitive strain of A. nidulans to LY214352-resistance was isolated from the library by sib-selection. Restriction fragments from cosmid 6A6-6 containing the functional resistance gene were identified by transformation, and sequenced. The LY214352-resistance gene coded for a protein of 520 amino acids that had a 34% identity and a 57% similarity in a 333 amino-acid overlap to E. coli dihydroorotate dehydrogenase (DHO-DH). The results of a series of biochemical mechanism-of-action studies initiated simultaneously with molecular-genetic experiments also suggested that DHO-DH was the target of LY214352. Assays measuring the inhibition of DHO-DH activity by LY214352 in a wild-type strain (I50=40 ng/ml) and a highly resistant mutant (I50>100 μg/ml) conclusively demonstrated that DHO-DH is the target site of LY214352 in A. nidulans. Several mutations in the DHO-DH (pyrE) gene that resulted in resistance to LY214352 were identified.


Chemical Communications | 2002

Engineered biosynthesis of novel spinosyns bearing altered deoxyhexose substituents

Sabine Gaisser; Christine J. Martin; Barrie Wilkinson; Rose M. Sheridan; Rachel E. Lill; Alison J. Weston; Sarah J. Ready; Clive Waldron; Gary D. Crouse; Peter F. Leadlay; James Staunton

Novel spinosyns have been prepared by biotransformation, using a genetically engineered strain of Saccharopolyspora erythraea, in which the beta-D-forosamine moiety in glycosidic linkage to the hydroxy group at C17 is replaced by alpha-L-mycarose.


Current Microbiology | 1991

Isolation, characterization, and genetic analysis ofAspergillus nidulans mutants resistant to the antifungal compound LY214352

Gary D. Gustafson; Clive Waldron; George Davis

We have isolated and characterized six chemically induced mutants of the filamentous fungusAspergillus nidulans that are resistant to the experimental fungicide 8-chloro-4-(2-chloro-4-fluoro-phenoxy)quinoline (LY214352). The mutants are 13- to 430-fold more resistant to LY214352 than the parental strain, and one of the mutant strains requires LY214352 for maximal growth. The resistance trait is governed by a single dominant or partially dominant gene in each mutant, and it is likely that all of the mutations are allelic. The LY214352-resistant mutants were not cross-resistant to other compounds that inhibit the growth ofA. nidulans. The implications of these findings on the potential for development of resistance to LY214352 are discussed.


Journal of Natural Products | 2006

Engineering of the spinosyn PKS: directing starter unit incorporation.

Lesley S. Sheehan; Rachel E. Lill; Barrie Wilkinson; Rose M. Sheridan; William A. Vousden; Andrew L. Kaja; Gary D. Crouse; James M. Gifford; Paul R. Graupner; Laura L. Karr; Paul Lewer; Thomas C. Sparks; Peter F. Leadlay; Clive Waldron; Christine J. Martin

Collaboration


Dive into the Clive Waldron's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge