Jarmo Niemi
University of Turku
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Featured researches published by Jarmo Niemi.
The EMBO Journal | 2004
Azmiri Sultana; Anna Jansson; Ji-Shu Wang; Jarmo Niemi; Pekka Mäntsälä; Gunter Schneider
SnoaL belongs to a family of small polyketide cyclases, which catalyse ring closure steps in the biosynthesis of polyketide antibiotics produced in Streptomyces. Several of these antibiotics are among the most used anti‐cancer drugs currently in use. The crystal structure of SnoaL, involved in nogalamycin biosynthesis, with a bound product, has been determined to 1.35 Å resolution. The fold of the subunit can be described as a distorted α+β barrel, and the ligand is bound in the hydrophobic interior of the barrel. The 3D structure and site‐directed mutagenesis experiments reveal that the mechanism of the intramolecular aldol condensation catalysed by SnoaL is different from that of the classical aldolases, which employ covalent Schiff base formation or a metal ion cofactor. The invariant residue Asp121 acts as an acid/base catalyst during the reaction. Stabilisation of the enol(ate) intermediate is mainly achieved by the delocalisation of the electron pair over the extended π system of the substrate. These polyketide cyclases thus form of family of enzymes with a unique catalytic strategy for aldol condensation.
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2007
Igor Alexeev; Azmiri Sultana; Pekka Mäntsälä; Jarmo Niemi; Gunter Schneider
Aclacinomycin (Acl) oxidoreductase (AknOx) catalyzes the last two steps in the biosynthesis of polyketide antibiotics of the Acl group, the oxidation of the terminal sugar moiety rhodinose to l-aculose. We present the crystal structure of AknOx with bound FAD and the product AclY, refined to 1.65-Å resolution. The overall fold of AknOx identifies the enzyme as a member of the p-cresol methylhydroxylase superfamily. The cofactor is bicovalently attached to His-70 and Cys-130 as 8α-Nδ1-histidyl, 6-S-cysteinyl FAD. The polyketide ligand is bound in a deep cleft in the substrate-binding domain, with the tetracyclic ring system close to the enzyme surface and the three-sugar chain extending into the protein interior. The terminal sugar residue packs against the isoalloxazine ring of FAD and positions the carbon atoms that are oxidized close to the N5 atom of FAD. The structure and site-directed mutagenesis data presented here are consistent with a mechanism where the two different reactions of AknOx are catalyzed in the same active site but by different active site residues. Tyr-450 is responsible for proton removal from the C-4 hydroxyl group in the first reaction, the oxidation of rhodinose to cinerulose A. Tyr-378 acts as a catalytic base involved in proton abstraction from C3 of cinerulose A in the second reaction, for formation l-aculose. Replacement of this residue, however, does not impair the conversion of rhodinose to cinerulose A.
Microbiology | 1994
Jarmo Niemi; Kristiina Ylihonko; Juha Hakala; Raimo Pärssinen; Anja Kopio; Pekka Mäntsälä
A DNA segment cloned from Streptomyces purpurascens ATCC 25489 close to a region that hybridized to a probe containing part of the actinorhodin polyketide synthase caused S. galilaeus ATCC 31615 to produce new anthracyclines. When transformed with certain sub-clones of this segment, the host produced glycosides of epsilon-rhodomycinone, beta-rhodomycinone, 10-demethoxycarbonylaklavinone and 11-deoxy-beta-rhodomycinone in addition to those of aklavinone, the natural anthracyclines of S. galilaeus. The first two compounds are S. purpurascens products and the other two are novel compounds that conceptually are structural hybrids between S. galilaeus and S. purpurascens products. Three glycosides of one of the novel aglycones, 11-deoxy-beta-rhodomycinone, were purified and found to possess cytotoxic activity against L1210 mouse leukaemia cells. Separate regions of the cloned S. purpurascens DNA are responsible for modification of the S. galilaeus host product at the 10- and 11-positions.
Microbiology | 1994
Kristiina Ylihonko; Juha Hakala; Jarmo Niemi; Juhani Lundell; Pekka Mäntsälä
Twelve mutants of Streptomyces galilaeus (ATCC 31615) blocked in the production of aclacinomycin A, an anthracycline antibiotic with significant antitumour activity, accumulated intermediates of the biosynthesis of aclacinomycins and several anthracyclines with variant sugar moieties. Three of these aklavinone glycosides have not been described before. Mutant strains H028, H061 and H036 were blocked before the formation of aklavinone, a common intermediate for most anthracyclines. Strain H039 accumulated aklavinone and H026, H035, H038 and H054 had mutations that changed glycosylation of aklavinone. Characterization of the mutants and their products is described.
Chemistry & Biology | 2008
Terhi Oja; Kaisa Palmu; Hanna Lehmussola; Outi Leppäranta; Kati Hännikäinen; Jarmo Niemi; Pekka Mäntsälä; Mikko Metsä-Ketelä
Alnumycin is closely related to the benzoisochromanequinone (BIQ) polyketides such as actinorhodin. Exceptional structural features include differences in aglycone tailoring that result in the unique alnumycin chromophore and the existence of an unusual 4-hydroxymethyl-5-hydroxy-1,3-dioxan moiety. Cloning and sequencing of the alnumycin gene cluster from Streptomyces sp. CM020 revealed expected biosynthesis genes for polyketide assembly, but several genes encoding subsequent tailoring enzymes were highly atypical. Heterologous expression studies confirmed that all of the genes required for alnumycin biosynthesis resided within the sequenced clone. Inactivation of genes aln4 and aln5 showed that the mechanism of pyran ring formation differs from actinorhodin and granaticin pathways. Further inactivation studies identified two genes, alnA and alnB, involved in the synthesis and attachment of the dioxan moiety, and resulted in the production of the polyketide prealnumycin.
Chemistry & Biology | 2008
Zhanliang Liu; Pekka Mäntsälä; Jarmo Niemi; Mikko Metsä-Ketelä
Tailoring steps in aromatic polyketide antibiotic biosynthesis are an important source of structural diversity and, consequently, an intriguing focal point for enzymological studies. PgaE and PgaM from Streptomyces sp. PGA64 are representatives of flavoenzymes catalyzing early post-PKS reactions in angucycline biosynthesis. This in vitro study illustrates that the chemoenzymatic conversion of UWM6 into the metabolite, gaudimycin C, requires multiple closely coupled reactions to prevent intermediate degradation. The NMR structure of gaudimycin C confirms that the reaction cascade involves C12- and C12b-hydroxylation, C2,3-dehydration, and stereospecific ketoreduction at C6. Enzymatic 18O incorporation studies verify that the oxygens at C12 and C12b derive from O2 and H2O, respectively. The results indicate that PgaM deviates mechanistically from flavoprotein monooxygenases, and suggest an alternative catalytic mechanism involving a quinone methide intermediate.
Biochemistry | 2010
Thadée Grocholski; Hanna Koskiniemi; Ylva Lindqvist; Pekka Mäntsälä; Jarmo Niemi; Günter Schneider
SnoaB is a cofactor-independent monooxygenase that catalyzes the conversion of 12-deoxynogalonic acid to nogalonic acid in the biosynthesis of the aromatic polyketide nogalamycin in Streptomyces nogalater. In vitro (18)O(2) experiments establish that the oxygen atom incorporated into the substrate is derived from molecular oxygen. The crystal structure of the enzyme was determined in two different space groups to 1.7 and 1.9 A resolution, respectively. The enzyme displays the ferredoxin fold, with the characteristic beta-strand exchange at the dimer interface. The crystal structures reveal a putative catalytic triad involving two asparagine residues, Asn18 and Asn63, and a water molecule, which may play important roles in the enzymatic reaction. Site-directed mutagenesis experiments, replacing the two asparagines individually by alanine, led to a 100-fold drop in enzymatic activity. Replacement of an invariant tryptophan residue in the active site of the enzyme by phenylalanine also resulted in an enzyme variant with about 1% residual activity. Taken together, our findings are most consistent with a carbanion mechanism where the deprotonated substrate reacts with molecular oxygen via one electron transfer and formation of a caged radical.
Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2003
Anna Jansson; Jarmo Niemi; Pekka Mäntsälä; Günter Schneider
Aclacinomycin methylesterase (RdmC) is one of the tailoring enzymes that modify the aklavinone skeleton in the biosynthesis of anthracyclines in Streptomyces species. The crystal structures of this enzyme from Streptomyces purpurascens in complex with the product analogues 10-decarboxymethylaclacinomycin T and 10-decarboxymethylaclacinomycin A were determined to nominal resolutions of 1.45 and 1.95 Å, respectively. RdmC is built up of two domains. The larger α/β domain shows the common α/β hydrolase fold, whereas the smaller domain is α-helical. The active site and substrate binding pocket are located at the interface between the two domains. Decarboxymethylaclacinomycin T and decarboxymethylaclacinomycin A bind close to the catalytic triad (Ser102-His276-Asp248) in a hydrophobic pocket, with the sugar moieties located at the surface of the enzyme. The binding of the ligands is dominated by hydrophobic interactions, and specificity appears to be controlled mainly by the shape of the binding pocket rather than through specific hydrogen bonds. Mechanistic key features consistent with the structure of complexes of RdmC with product analogues are Ser102 acting as nucleophile and transition state stabilization by an oxyanion hole formed by the backbone amides of residues Gly32 and Met103.
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2012
Terhi Oja; Karel D. Klika; Laura Appassamy; Jari Sinkkonen; Pekka Mäntsälä; Jarmo Niemi; Mikko Metsä-Ketelä
Carbohydrate moieties are important components of natural products, which are often imperative for the solubility and biological activity of the compounds. The aromatic polyketide alnumycin A contains an extraordinary sugar-like 4′-hydroxy-5′-hydroxymethyl-2′,7′-dioxane moiety attached via a carbon-carbon bond to the aglycone. Here we have extensively investigated the biosynthesis of the dioxane unit through 13C labeling studies, gene inactivation experiments and enzymatic synthesis. We show that AlnA and AlnB, members of the pseudouridine glycosidase and haloacid dehalogenase enzyme families, respectively, catalyze C-ribosylation conceivably through Michael-type addition of d-ribose-5-phosphate and dephosphorylation. The ribose moiety may be attached both in furanose (alnumycin C) and pyranose (alnumycin D) forms. The C1′-C2′ bond of alnumycin C is subsequently cleaved and the ribose unit is rearranged into an unprecedented dioxolane (cis-bicyclo[3.3.0]-2′,4′,6′-trioxaoctan-3′β-ol) structure present in alnumycin B. The reaction is catalyzed by Aln6, which belongs to a previously uncharacterized enzyme family. The conversion was accompanied with consumption of O2 and formation of H2O2, which allowed us to propose that the reaction may proceed via hydroxylation of C1′ followed by retro-aldol cleavage and acetal formation. Interestingly, no cofactors could be detected and the reaction was also conducted in the presence of metal chelating agents. The last step is the conversion of alnumycin B into the final end-product alnumycin A catalyzed by Aln4, an NADPH-dependent aldo-keto reductase. This characterization of the dioxane biosynthetic pathway sets the basis for the utilization of C-C bound ribose, dioxolane and dioxane moieties in the generation of improved biologically active compounds.
Biochimica et Biophysica Acta | 2000
Yulong Wang; Jarmo Niemi; Kalervo Airas; Kristiina Ylihonko; Juha Hakala; Pekka Mäntsälä
The genes rdmB and rdmC of Streptomyces purpurascens encoding aclacinomycin modifying enzymes RdmB and RdmC were expressed in Streptomyces lividans TK24. In contrast to the earlier suggestion that RdmC may be an esterase that causes the removal of the carbomethoxy group from the 10 position of aclacinomycins, RdmC functions as an aclacinomycin methyl esterase and catalyzes the removal of the methoxy group from the C-15 position of aclacinomycin T producing 15-demethoxyaclacinomycin T. RdmB acts upon C-10 of 15-demethoxyaclacinomycin T and is able to remove the carboxylic group from the C-10 position. It functions also as an aclacinomycin-10-hydroxylase being able to add a hydroxyl group at the same, C-10 position in vitro. Aclacinomycin methyl esterase was purified to apparent homogeneity from S. lividans carrying the rdmC and aclacinomycin-10-hydroxylase as a glutathione S-transferase fusion construct from Escherichia coli carrying the rdmB gene, respectively. Aclacinomycin methyl esterase functions as a monomer and aclacinomycin-10-hydroxylase as a tetramer. Aclacinomycin methyl esterase has an exceptionally high temperature stability and has an apparent K(m) for aclacinomycin T of 15.5 microM. The introduction of rdmC and rdmB in a Streptomyces galilaeus mutant HO38 produced the same modifications of aclacinomycin T in vivo as aclacinomycin methyl esterase and aclacinomycin-10-hydroxylase in vitro.