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Featured researches published by Jia Zeng.


Iubmb Life | 2012

Type III polyketide synthases in natural product biosynthesis

Dayu Yu; Fuchao Xu; Jia Zeng; Jixun Zhan

Polyketides represent an important class of biologically active and structurally diverse compounds in nature. They are synthesized from acyl‐coenzyme A substrates by polyketide synthases (PKSs). PKSs are classified into three groups: types I, II, and III. This article introduces recent studies on type III PKSs identified from plants, bacteria, and fungi, and describes the catalytic functions of these enzymes in detail. Plant type III PKSs have been widely studied, as exemplified by chalcone synthase, which plays an important role in the synthesis of plant metabolites. Bacterial type III PKSs fall into five groups, many of which were identified from Streptomyces, a genus that has been well known for its production of bioactive molecules and genetic alterability. Although it was believed that type III PKSs exist exclusively in plants and bacteria, recent fungal genome sequencing projects and biochemical studies revealed the presence of type III PKSs in filamentous fungi, which provides a new chance to study fungal secondary metabolism and synthesize “unnatural” natural products. Type III PKSs have been used for the biosynthesis of novel molecules through precursor‐directed and structure‐based mutagenesis approaches.


Applied and Environmental Microbiology | 2012

Production of indole-3-acetic acid via the indole-3-acetamide pathway in the plant-beneficial bacterium, Pseudomonas chlororaphis O6, is inhibited by ZnO nanoparticles but enhanced by CuO nanoparticles

Christian O. Dimkpa; Jia Zeng; Joan E. McLean; David W. Britt; Jixun Zhan; Anne J. Anderson

ABSTRACT The beneficial bacterium Pseudomonas chlororaphis O6 produces indole-3-acetic acid (IAA), a plant growth regulator. However, the pathway involved in IAA production in this bacterium has not been reported. In this paper we describe the involvement of the indole-3-acetamide (IAM) pathway in IAA production in P. chlororaphis O6 and the effects of CuO and ZnO nanoparticles (NPs). Sublethal levels of CuO and ZnO NPs differentially affected the levels of IAA secreted in medium containing tryptophan as the precursor. After 15 h of growth, CuO NP-exposed cells had metabolized more tryptophan than the control and ZnO NP-challenged cells. The CuO NP-treated cells produced higher IAA levels than control cultures lacking NPs. In contrast, ZnO NPs inhibited IAA production. Mixing of CuO and ZnO NPs resulted in an intermediate level of IAA production relative to the levels in the separate CuO and ZnO NP treatments. The effect of CuO NPs on IAA levels could be duplicated by ions at the concentrations released from the NPs. However, ion release did not account for the inhibition caused by the ZnO NPs. The mechanism underlying changes in IAA levels cannot be accounted for by effects on transcript accumulation from genes encoding a tryptophan permease or the IAM hydrolase in 15-h cultures. These findings raise the issue of whether sublethal doses of NPs would modify the beneficial effects of association between plants and bacteria.


ChemBioChem | 2010

A novel fungal flavin-dependent halogenase for natural product biosynthesis.

Jia Zeng; Jixun Zhan

Halogenated molecules represent an important class of natural products, many of which are pharmaceutically relevant, such as chloramphenicol (antibacterial), vancomycin (antibacterial), and rebeccamycin (anticancer). Flavin-dependent halogenases have been identified as a major player in the introduction of halogen into activated organic molecules in natural product biosynthesis. However, the flavin-dependent halogenases identified so far are mainly prokaryotic tryptophan halogenases with strict substrate specificity. Most of these enzymes are involved in early biosynthetic steps of natural products to modify precursors such as tryptophan, which has limited their potential as biocatalysts to prepare various halogenated molecules. Considering the biological importance of halogens in natural products, a potent halogenase able to tailor diverse complex structures will be useful for enzymatic synthesis of novel halogenated compounds. Monocillin I (1) and radicicol (1 a) are potent heat shock protein 90 (Hsp90) inhibitors isolated from various fungi, of


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2013

Rational reprogramming of fungal polyketide first-ring cyclization

Yuquan Xu; Tong Zhou; Zhengfu Zhou; Shiyou Su; Sue A. Roberts; William R. Montfort; Jia Zeng; Ming Chen; Wei Zhang; Min Lin; Jixun Zhan; István Molnár

Resorcylic acid lactones and dihydroxyphenylacetic acid lactones represent important pharmacophores with heat shock response and immune system modulatory activities. The biosynthesis of these fungal polyketides involves a pair of collaborating iterative polyketide synthases (iPKSs): a highly reducing iPKS with product that is further elaborated by a nonreducing iPKS (nrPKS) to yield a 1,3-benzenediol moiety bridged by a macrolactone. Biosynthesis of unreduced polyketides requires the sequestration and programmed cyclization of highly reactive poly-β-ketoacyl intermediates to channel these uncommitted, pluripotent substrates to defined subsets of the polyketide structural space. Catalyzed by product template (PT) domains of the fungal nrPKSs and discrete aromatase/cyclase enzymes in bacteria, regiospecific first-ring aldol cyclizations result in characteristically different polyketide folding modes. However, a few fungal polyketides, including the dihydroxyphenylacetic acid lactone dehydrocurvularin, derive from a folding event that is analogous to the bacterial folding mode. The structural basis of such a drastic difference in the way a PT domain acts has not been investigated until now. We report here that the fungal vs. bacterial folding mode difference is portable on creating hybrid enzymes, and we structurally characterize the resulting unnatural products. Using structure-guided active site engineering, we unravel structural contributions to regiospecific aldol condensations and show that reshaping the cyclization chamber of a PT domain by only three selected point mutations is sufficient to reprogram the dehydrocurvularin nrPKS to produce polyketides with a fungal fold. Such rational control of first-ring cyclizations will facilitate efforts to the engineered biosynthesis of novel chemical diversity from natural unreduced polyketides.


Phytochemistry | 2013

The Sophora flavescens flavonoid compound trifolirhizin inhibits acetylcholine induced airway smooth muscle contraction.

Nan Yang; B. Liang; Kamal Srivastava; Jia Zeng; Jixun Zhan; L.L. Brown; Hugh A. Sampson; Joseph Goldfarb; Charles W. Emala; Xiu-Min Li

Asthma is a serious health problem worldwide, particularly in industrialized countries. Despite a better understanding of the pathophysiology of asthma, there are still considerable gaps in knowledge as well as a need for classes of drugs. ASHMI™ (Anti-asthma Herbal Medicine Intervention) is an aqueous extract of Ganoderma lucidum (Fr.) P. Karst (Ling Zhi), Sophora flavescens Aiton (Ku Shen) and Glycyrrhiza uralensis Fisch. ex DC (Gan Cao). It prevents allergic asthma airway hyper-reactivity in mice and inhibits acetylcholine (ACh) induced airway smooth muscle (ASM) contraction in tracheal rings from allergic asthmatic mice. The purpose of this research was to identify individual herb(s) and their active compound(s) that inhibit ASM contraction. It was found that S. flavescens, but not G. lucidum or G. uralensis aqueous extracts, inhibited ASM contraction in tracheal rings from asthmatic mice. Bioassay-guided isolation and identification of flavonoid fractions/compound(s) via methylene chloride extraction, preparative HPLC fractionation, and LC-MS and NMR spectroscopic analyses showed that trifolirhizin is an active constituent that inhibits acetylcholine mediated ASM contraction or directly relaxes pre-contracted ASM independent of β2-adrenoceptors.


Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry | 2011

Synthesis and antibacterial activity study of a novel class of cationic anthraquinone analogs

Jianjun Zhang; Nathan Redman; Anthony Litke; Jia Zeng; Jixun Zhan; Ka Yee Chan; Cheng-Wei Tom Chang

Reported previously by our group, one-pot cycloaddition using naphthoquinone, sodium azide and alkyl halides can lead to the formation of both 1-alkyl-1H- and 2-alkyl-2H-naphtho[2,3-d]triazole-4,9-diones. Herein, the effect of leaving group and additive in dictating the selectivity between the formation of 1-alkyl-1H- and 2-alkyl-2H-naphtho[2,3-d]triazole-4,9-diones has been further investigated. In the process of investigating the factors that control the selectivity and the biological activity associated with these two compounds, a novel class of antibacterial cationic anthraquinone analogs has been developed. Although these compounds are structurally similar, different antibacterial profiles are noted. One lead compound, 4e manifests high potency (MIC<1μg/mL) and selectivity against Gram positive (G+) pathogens including methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA) while exerting only modest activity against Gram negative (G-) bacteria. Other lead compounds (4f and 4g) exhibit broad antibacterial activity including MRSA and vancomycin-resistant Enterococcus faecalis (VRE) that is comparable to other commercially available cationic antiseptic chemicals. This unique difference in antibacterial profile may pave the way for the development of new therapeutic agents.


Applied and Environmental Microbiology | 2012

Identification of the Herboxidiene Biosynthetic Gene Cluster in Streptomyces chromofuscus ATCC 49982

Lei Shao; Jiachen Zi; Jia Zeng; Jixun Zhan

ABSTRACT The 53-kb biosynthetic gene cluster for the novel anticholesterol natural product herboxidiene was identified in Streptomyces chromofuscus ATCC 49982 by genome sequencing and gene inactivation. In addition to herboxidiene, a biosynthetic intermediate, 18-deoxy-herboxidiene, was also isolated from the fermentation broth of S. chromofuscus ATCC 49982 as a minor metabolite.


Journal of Bioscience and Bioengineering | 2011

Metabolism of quercetin by Cunninghamella elegans ATCC 9245.

Jiachen Zi; Jonathan Valiente; Jia Zeng; Jixun Zhan

Incubation of quercetin with Cunninghamella elegans ATCC 9245 yielded three metabolites, including quercetin 3-O-β-D-glucopyranoside, kaempferol 3-O-β-D-glucopyranoside and isorhamnetin 3-O-β-D-glucopyranoside. Glucosylation, O-methylation and dehydroxylation were involved in the process, among which dehydroxylation has never been found in Cunninghamella. Quercetin was completely metabolized in 72 h.


Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2013

Specific chlorination of isoquinolines by a fungal flavin-dependent halogenase.

Jia Zeng; Anna K. Lytle; David Gage; Sean J. Johnson; Jixun Zhan

Rdc2 is the first flavin-dependent halogenase identified from fungi. Based on the reported structure of the bacterial halogenase CmlS, we have built a homology model for Rdc2. The model suggests an open substrate binding site that is capable of binding the natural substrate, monocillin II, and possibly other molecules such as 4-hydroxyisoquinoline (1) and 6-hydroxyisoquinoline (2). In vitro and in vivo halogenation experiments confirmed that 1 and 2 can be halogenated at the position ortho to the hydroxyl group, leading to the synthesis of the chlorinated isoquinolines 1a and 2a, respectively, which further expands the spectrum of identified substrates of Rdc2. This work revealed that Rdc2 is a useful biocatalyst for the synthesis of various halogenated compounds.


Metabolic Engineering | 2013

Engineered production of fungal anticancer cyclooligomer depsipeptides in Saccharomyces cerevisiae.

Dayu Yu; Fuchao Xu; Jiachen Zi; Siyuan Wang; David Gage; Jia Zeng; Jixun Zhan

Two fungal cyclooligomer depsipeptide synthetases(CODSs), BbBEAS (352 kDa) and BbBSLS (348 kDa) from Beauveria bassiana ATCC7159, were reconstituted in Saccharomyces cerevisiae BJ5464-NpgA, leading to the production of the corresponding anticancer natural products, beauvericins and bassianolide, respectively. The titers of beauvericins (33.8 ± 1.4 mg/l) and bassianolide (21.7± 0.1 mg/l) in the engineered S. cerevisiae BJ5464-NpgA strains were comparable to those in the native producer B. bassiana. Feeding D-hydroxyisovaleric acid (D-Hiv) and the corresponding L-amino acid precursors improved the production of beauvericins and bassianolide. However, the high price of D-Hiv limits its application in large-scale production of these cyclooligomer depsipeptides. Alternatively, we engineered another enzyme, ketoisovalerate reductase (KIVR) from B. bassiana, into S. cerevisiae BJ5464-NpgA for enhanced in situ synthesis of this expensive substrate. Co-expression of BbBEAS and KIVR in the yeast led to significant improvement of the production of beauvericins.The total titer of beauvericin and its congeners (beauvericins A-C) was increased to 61.7 ± 3.0 mg/l and reached 2.6-fold of that in the native producer B. bassiana ATCC7159. Supplement of L-Val at 10 mM improved the supply of ketoisovalerate, the substrate of KIVR, which consequently further increased the total titer of beauvericins to 105.8 ± 2.1 mg/l. Using this yeast system,we functionally characterized an unknown CODS from Fusarium venenatum NRRL 26139 as a beauvericin synthetase, which was named as FvBEAS. Our work thus provides a useful approach for functional reconstitution and engineering of fungal CODSs for efficient production of this family of anticancer molecules.

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Dayu Yu

Northeast Dianli University

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Nan Yang

Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai

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Xiu-Min Li

Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai

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Fuchao Xu

Utah State University

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Lei Shao

Utah State University

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Lei Sun

Utah State University

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