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Dive into the research topics where Jin-Yue Pu is active.

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Featured researches published by Jin-Yue Pu.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2012

Hijacking a hydroxyethyl unit from a central metabolic ketose into a nonribosomal peptide assembly line

Chao Peng; Jin-Yue Pu; Li-Qiang Song; Xiao-Hong Jian; Man-Cheng Tang; Gong-Li Tang

Nonribosomal peptide synthetases (NRPSs) usually catalyze the biosynthesis of peptide natural products by sequential selection, activation, and condensation of amino acid precursors. It was reported that some fatty acids, α-ketoacids, and α-hydroxyacids originating from amino acid metabolism as well as polyketide-derived units can also be used by NRPS assembly lines as an alternative to amino acids. Ecteinascidin 743 (ET-743), naphthyridinomycin (NDM), and quinocarcin (QNC) are three important antitumor natural products belonging to the tetrahydroisoquinoline family. Although ET-743 has been approved as an anticancer drug, the origin of an identical two-carbon (C2) fragment among these three antibiotics has not been elucidated despite much effort in the biosynthetic research in the past 30 y. Here we report that two unexpected two-component transketolases (TKases), NapB/NapD in the NDM biosynthetic pathway and QncN/QncL in QNC biosynthesis, catalyze the transfer of a glycolaldehyde unit from ketose to the lipoyl group to yield the glycolicacyl lipoic acid intermediate and then transfer the C2 unit to an acyl carrier protein (ACP) to form glycolicacyl-S-ACP as an extender unit for NRPS. Our results demonstrate a unique NRPS extender unit directly derived from ketose phosphates through (α,β-dihydroxyethyl)-thiamin diphosphate and a lipoyl group-tethered ester intermediate catalyzed by the TKase-ACP platform in the context of NDM and QNC biosynthesis, all of which also highlights the biosynthesis of ET-743. This hybrid system and precursor are distinct from the previously described universal modes involving the NRPS machinery. They exemplify an alternate strategy in hybrid NRPS biochemistry and enrich the diversity of precursors for NRPS combinatorial biosynthesis.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2015

A Panel of Protease-Responsive RNA Polymerases Respond to Biochemical Signals by Production of Defined RNA Outputs in Live Cells.

Jin-Yue Pu; Ian Chronis; Daniel Ahn; Bryan C. Dickinson

RNA is an attractive biomolecule for biosensing and engineering applications due to its information storage capacity and ability to drive gene expression or knockdown. However, methods to link chemical signals to the production of specific RNAs are lacking. Here, we develop protease-responsive RNA polymerases (PRs) as a strategy to encode multiple specific proteolytic events in defined sequences of RNA in live mammalian cells. This work demonstrates that RNAP-based molecular recording devices can be deployed for multimodal analyses of biochemical activities or to trigger gene circuits using measured signaling events.


Organic Letters | 2013

Naphthyridinomycin Biosynthesis Revealing the Use of Leader Peptide to Guide Nonribosomal Peptide Assembly

Jin-Yue Pu; Chao Peng; Man-Cheng Tang; Yue Zhang; Jian-Ping Guo; Li-Qiang Song; Qiang Hua; Gong-Li Tang

Analysis of naphthyridinomycin gene cluster revealed that this antibiotic is generated by nonribosomal peptide synthetase (NRPS) machinery. However, four modules encoded by two genes do not correspond with the structural units in the final product. Genetic and biochemical characterization of the gene cluster suggested that the leader peptide mechanism for the NRPS assembly line was involved in biosynthesis of this tetrahydroisoquinoline alkaloid.


Angewandte Chemie | 2017

Catalysis of Extracellular Deamination by a FAD-Linked Oxidoreductase after Prodrug Maturation in the Biosynthesis of Saframycin A

Li-Qiang Song; Ying-Ying Zhang; Jin-Yue Pu; Man-Cheng Tang; Chao Peng; Gong-Li Tang

The biosynthesis of antibiotics in bacteria is usually believed to be an intracellular process, at the end of which the matured compounds are exported outside the cells. The biosynthesis of saframycin A (SFM-A), an antitumor antibiotic, requires a cryptic fatty acyl chain to guide the construction of a pentacyclic tetrahydroisoquinoline scaffold; however, the follow-up deacylation and deamination steps remain unknown. Herein we demonstrate that SfmE, a membrane-bound peptidase, hydrolyzes the fatty acyl chain to release the amino group; and SfmCy2, a secreted oxidoreductase covalently associated with FAD, subsequently performs an oxidative deamination extracellularly. These results not only fill in the missing steps of SFM-A biosynthesis, but also reveal that a FAD-binding oxidoreductase catalyzes an unexpected deamination reaction through an unconventional extracellular pathway in Streptmyces bacteria.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2017

RNA Polymerase Tags To Monitor Multidimensional Protein–Protein Interactions Reveal Pharmacological Engagement of Bcl-2 Proteins

Jin-Yue Pu; Jeffrey A. Dewey; Abbas Hadji; James L. LaBelle; Bryan C. Dickinson

We report the development of a new technology for monitoring multidimensional protein-protein interactions (PPIs) inside live mammalian cells using split RNA polymerase (RNAP) tags. In this new system, a protein-of-interest is tagged with an N-terminal split RNAP (RNAPN), and multiple potential binding partners are each fused to orthogonal C-terminal RNAPs (RNAPC). Assembly of RNAPN with each RNAPC is highly dependent on interactions between the tagged proteins. Each PPI-mediated RNAPN-RNAPC assembly transcribes from a separate promoter on a supplied DNA substrate, thereby generating a unique RNA output signal for each PPI. We develop and validate this new approach in the context of the Bcl-2 family of proteins. These key regulators of apoptosis are important cancer mediators, but are challenging to therapeutically target due to imperfect selectivity that leads to either off-target toxicity or tumor resistance. We demonstrate binary (1 × 1) and ternary (1 × 2) Bcl-2 PPI analyses by imaging fluorescent protein translation from mRNA outputs. Next, we perform a 1 × 4 PPI network analysis by direct measurement of four unique RNA signals via RT-qPCR. Finally, we use these new tools to monitor pharmacological engagement of Bcl-2 protein inhibitors, and uncover inhibitor-dependent competitive PPIs. The split RNAP tags improve upon other protein fragment complementation (PFC) approaches by offering both multidimensionality and sensitive detection using nucleic acid amplification and analysis techniques. Furthermore, this technology opens new opportunities for synthetic biology applications due to the versatility of RNA outputs for cellular engineering applications.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2018

Extracellularly oxidative activation and inactivation of matured prodrug for cryptic self-resistance in naphthyridinomycin biosynthesis

Yue Zhang; Wan-Hong Wen; Jin-Yue Pu; Man-Cheng Tang; Liwen Zhang; Chao Peng; Yuquan Xu; Gong-Li Tang

Significance The shielding strategy for self-resistance in antibiotic biosynthesis from bacteria has been known to employ reversible group-transfer reactions that usually do not directly act on the antibiotic pharmacophore. Typically, the phosphorylation-modified, glycosylation-modified, acetylation-modified, and prepeptide-modified prodrug need to be activated by removing the protection group during or following export and, thereby, employing the hydrolysis reaction as the final step. Herein, we discover an unprecedented oxidative activation and overoxidative inactivation of a matured prodrug; significantly, the oxidation reaction directly deals with the drug warhead and occurs outside the host cells. This cryptic self-resistance mechanism sheds light on antibiotic resistance and the complex biology of extracellular environment. Understanding how antibiotic-producing bacteria deal with highly reactive chemicals will ultimately guide therapeutic strategies to combat the increasing clinical resistance crisis. Here, we uncovered a distinctive self-defense strategy featured by a secreted oxidoreductase NapU to perform extracellularly oxidative activation and conditionally overoxidative inactivation of a matured prodrug in naphthyridinomycin (NDM) biosynthesis from Streptomyces lusitanus NRRL 8034. It was suggested that formation of NDM first involves a nonribosomal peptide synthetase assembly line to generate a prodrug. After exclusion and prodrug maturation, we identified a pharmacophore-inactivated intermediate, which required reactivation by NapU via oxidative C-H bond functionalization extracellularly to afford NDM. Beyond that, NapU could further oxidatively inactivate the NDM pharmacophore to avoid self-cytotoxicity if they coexist longer than necessary. This discovery represents an amalgamation of sophisticatedly temporal and spatial shielding mode conferring self-resistance in antibiotic biosynthesis from Gram-positive bacteria.


Nature Chemical Biology | 2017

Evolution of a split RNA polymerase as a versatile biosensor platform

Jin-Yue Pu; Julia Zinkus-Boltz; Bryan C. Dickinson


Biotechnology Letters | 2014

Characterization of AvaR1, an autoregulator receptor that negatively controls avermectins production in a high avermectin-producing strain

Jian-Bo Wang; Feng Zhang; Jin-Yue Pu; Juan Zhao; Qunfei Zhao; Gong-Li Tang


ACS Chemical Biology | 2017

Multidimensional Control of Cas9 by Evolved RNA Polymerase-Based Biosensors

Jin-Yue Pu; Kaitlin Kentala; Bryan C. Dickinson


Angewandte Chemie | 2017

A FAD-linked Oxidoreductase Enables an Extracellular Deamination after Saframycin A Maturation

Gong-Li Tang; Li-Qiang Song; Ying-Ying Zhang; Jin-Yue Pu; Man-Cheng Tang; Chao Peng

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Gong-Li Tang

Chinese Academy of Sciences

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Man-Cheng Tang

Chinese Academy of Sciences

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Li-Qiang Song

Chinese Academy of Sciences

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Ying-Ying Zhang

Chinese Academy of Sciences

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Yue Zhang

Chinese Academy of Sciences

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Feng Zhang

Chinese Academy of Sciences

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Jian-Bo Wang

Chinese Academy of Sciences

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Juan Zhao

Chinese Academy of Sciences

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Qunfei Zhao

Chinese Academy of Sciences

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