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Dive into the research topics where Leonard Katz is active.

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Featured researches published by Leonard Katz.


Gene | 2000

The FK520 gene cluster of Streptomyces hygroscopicus var. ascomyceticus (ATCC 14891) contains genes for biosynthesis of unusual polyketide extender units.

Kai Wu; Loleta Chung; W. Peter Revill; Leonard Katz; Christopher D. Reeves

FK520 (ascomycin) is a macrolide produced by Streptomyces hygroscopicus var. ascomyceticus (ATCC 14891) that has immunosuppressive, neurotrophic and antifungal activities. To further elucidate the biosynthesis of this and related macrolides, we cloned and sequenced an 80kb region encompassing the FK520 gene cluster. Genes encoding the three polyketide synthase (PKS) subunits (fkbB, fkbC and fkbA), the peptide synthetase (fkbP), the 31-O-methyltransferase (fkbM), the C-9 hydroxylase (fkbD) and the 9-hydroxyl oxidase (fkbO) had the same organization as the genes reported in the FK506 gene cluster of Streptomyces sp. MA6548 (Motamedi, H., Shafiee, A., 1998. The biosynthetic gene cluster for the macrolactone ring of the immunosuppressant FK506. Eur. J. Biochem. 256, 528-534). Disruption of a PKS gene in the cluster using the φC31 phage vector, KC515, led to antibiotic non-producing strains, proving the identity of the cluster. Previous labeling data have indicated that FK520 biosynthesis uses novel polyketide extender units (Byrne, K.M., Shafiee, A., Nielson, J., Arison, B., Monaghan, R.L., Kaplan, L., 1993. The biosynthesis and enzymology of an immunosuppressant, immunomycin, produced by Streptomyces hygroscopicus var, ascomyceticus. Dev. Ind. Microbiol. 32, 29-45). Genes in the flanking regions of the FK520 cluster were identified that appear to be involved in synthesis of these extender units. All but two of these genes were homologous to genes with known function. In addition to a crotonyl-CoA reductase gene (fkbS), at least two other genes are proposed to be involved in biosynthesis of the atypical PKS extender unit ethylmalonyl-CoA, which accounts for the ethyl side chain on C-21 of FK520. A set of five contiguous genes (fkbGHIJK) is proposed to be involved in biosynthesis of an unusual PKS extender unit bearing an oxygen on the alpha-carbon, and leading to the 13- and 15-methoxy side chains. These putative precursor synthesis genes in the flanking regions of the FK520 cluster are not found in the flanking regions of the rapamycin cluster (Molnár, I., Aparicio, J.F., Haydock, S.F., Khaw, L.E., Schwecke, T., König, A., Staunton, J., Leadlay, P.F., 1996. Organisation of the biosynthetic gene cluster for rapamycin in Streptomyces hygroscopicus: analysis of genes flanking the polyketide synthase. Gene 169, 1-7), consistent with labeling data showing that rapamycin biosynthesis uses only malonyl and methylmalonyl extender units.


Gene | 2000

Isolation and characterization of the epothilone biosynthetic gene cluster from Sorangium cellulosum

Bryan Julien; Sanjay Shah; Rainer Ziermann; Robert Goldman; Leonard Katz; Chaitan Khosla

The epothilone biosynthetic gene cluster was isolated from Sorangium cellulosum strain SMP44. The gene cluster contains seven genes and spans approx. 56kb. The genes encoding the PKS, epoA, epoC, epoD, epoE, and epoF, are divided into nine modules. The EpoB protein is a non-ribosomal peptide synthetase (NRPS) that catalyzes formation of the thiazole found in the epothilones. EpoK is a P450 enzyme responsible for the epoxidation of epothilones C and D to epothilones A and B, respectively. EpoK was expressed in Escherichia coli, and the purified protein was shown to convert epothilone D to epothilone B in vitro.


Molecular Microbiology | 2000

Biosynthesis of the anti‐parasitic agent megalomicin: transformation of erythromycin to megalomicin in Saccharopolyspora erythraea

Yanina Volchegursky; Zhihao Hu; Leonard Katz; Robert McDaniel

Megalomicin is a therapeutically diverse compound which possesses antiparasitic, antiviral and antibacterial properties. It is produced by Micromonospora megalomicea and differs from the well‐known macrolide antibiotic erythromycin by the addition of a unique deoxyamino sugar, megosamine, to the C‐6 hydroxyl. We have cloned and sequenced a 48 kb segment of the megalomicin (meg) biosynthetic gene cluster which contains the modular polyketide synthase (PKS) and the complete pathway for megosamine biosynthesis. The similarities and distinctions between the related megalomicin and erythromycin gene clusters are discussed. Heterologous expression of the megalomicin PKS in Streptomyces lividans led to production of 6‐deoxyerythronolide B, the same macrolactone intermediate for erythromycin. A 12 kb fragment harbouring the putative megosamine pathway was expressed in Saccharopolyspora erythraea, resulting in the conversion of erythromycin to megalomicin. Considering the extensive knowledge surrounding the genetic engineering of the erythromycin PKS and the familiarity with genetic manipulation and fermentation of S. erythraea, the ability to produce megalomicin in this strain should allow the engineering of novel megalomicin analogues with potentially improved therapeutic activities.


Gene | 1990

Cloning of genes involved in erythromycin biosynthesis from Saccharopolyspora erythraea using a novel actinomycete-Escherichia coli cosmid

James Tuan; J.Mark Weber; Michael J. Staver; Judith O. Leung; Stefano Donadio; Leonard Katz

Two plasmids were constructed that replicate in Saccharopolyspora (Sac.) erythraea, Escherichia coli and Streptomyces (S.) lividans, and used for the cloning of a locus involved in the synthesis of the macrolide antibiotic erythromycin (Er). Plasmid pAL7002 contains the thiostrepton-resistance gene (tsr), a replicon-containing fragment from pJVI and pUC9. Plasmid pNJI contains the lambda cos site but is otherwise similar to pAL7002. A library of total DNA from Sac. erythraea was constructed in pNJI and probed in colony hybridizations with a DNA fragment containing ermE, the Sac. erythraea ErR-encoding gene. Plasmids obtained were subsequently introduced into EryA mutants of Sac. erythraea blocked in synthesis of Er (Ery-) and transformants were screened for restoration of Er production (Ery+). Several plasmids were found to convert two mutants to Ery+, but a third EryA strain could not be restored to Ery+ by any of the plasmids employed. A 5-kb segment, designated eryAI, responsible for restoring the Ery+ phenotype in the EryA strains, was identified and mapped in the segment 12 to 17 kb downstream from ermE. Gene disruption experiments indicated that the 5-kb length of eryAI is fully internal to an eryAI-containing transcript. In Southern blots it was shown that one of the EryA strains carried a small deletion in eryAI and that, in at least some of the transformants restored to Ery+, the deletion had been replaced by the wild-type eryAI allele.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)


Antimicrobial Agents and Chemotherapy | 2004

Chalcomycin Biosynthesis Gene Cluster from Streptomyces bikiniensis: Novel Features of an Unusual Ketolide Produced through Expression of the chm Polyketide Synthase in Streptomyces fradiae

Shannon L. Ward; Zhihao Hu; Andreas Schirmer; Ralph Reid; W. Peter Revill; Christopher D. Reeves; Oleg V. Petrakovsky; Steven D. Dong; Leonard Katz

ABSTRACT Chalcomycin, a 16-membered macrolide antibiotic made by the bacterium Streptomyces bikiniensis, contains a 2,3-trans double bond and the neutral sugar d-chalcose in place of the amino sugar mycaminose found in most other 16-membered macrolides. Degenerate polyketide synthase (PKS)-specific primers were used to amplify DNA fragments from S. bikiniensis with very high identity to a unique ketosynthase domain of the tylosin PKS. The resulting amplimers were used to identify two overlapping cosmids encompassing the chm PKS. Sequencing revealed a contiguous segment of >60 kb carrying 25 putative genes for biosynthesis of the polyketide backbone, the two deoxysugars, and enzymes involved in modification of precursors of chalcomycin or resistance to it. The chm PKS lacks the ketoreductase and dehydratase domains in the seventh module expected to produce the 2,3-double bond in chalcomycin. Expression of PKS in the heterologous host Streptomyces fradiae, from which the tyl genes encoding the PKS had been removed, resulted in production of at least one novel compound, characterized as a 3-keto 16-membered macrolactone in equilibrium with its 3-trans enol tautomer and containing the sugar mycaminose at the C-5 position, in agreement with the structure predicted on the basis of the domain organization of the chm PKS. The production of a 3-keto macrolide from the chm PKS indicates that a discrete set of enzymes is responsible for the introduction of the 2,3-trans double bond in chalcomycin. From comparisons of the open reading frames to sequences in databases, a pathway for the synthesis of nucleoside diphosphate-d-chalcose was proposed.


Medicinal Research Reviews | 1999

Novel macrolides through genetic engineering.

Leonard Katz; Robert McDaniel

Erythromycin, a complex polyketide antibiotic belonging to the macrolide class, is produced as a natural product by the bacterium Saccharopolyspora erythraea. The genes encoding the enzymes responsible for the synthesis of the antibiotic bave been cloned and sequenced, revealing that the polyketide backbone of the molecule in produced by a polyketide synthase (PKS) composed of multifunctional proteins that contain discrete fuctional domains for each step of sythesis. Genetic manipulation of the PKS‐encoding genes can result in predictable changes in the structure of the polyketide component of erythromycin, many of which are not easily achievable through standard chemical derivatization or synthesis. Many of the changes can be combined to lead to the further generation of navel structures. Whereas genetic engineering of the erythromycin structure has been practiced for a number of years, the re cent and continuing discoveries of modular PKSs for the synthesis of many other important complex polyketides has raised the possibilty of generating novel structures in these molecules by genetic manipulation, as well.


The Journal of Antibiotics | 2005

Generation of new epothilones by genetic engineering of a polyketide synthase in Myxococcus xanthus

Li Tang; Loleta Chung; John R. Carney; Courtney M. Starks; Peter Licari; Leonard Katz

Epothilones, potent cytotoxic agents and potential anticancer drugs, are complex polyketides produced by a modular polyketide synthase (PKS). The epothilone PKS genes were introduced and expressed in Myxococcus xanthus and engineered to generate novel unnatural natural products which can be used as new scaffolds for chemical modification. Inactivation of the KR domain in module 6 of the epo PKS resulted in accumulation of 9-oxoepothilone D and its isomer 8-epi-9-oxoepothilone D as the major products. Modification of the KR domain in module 4 resulted in the production of the expected compound 12,13-dihydro-13-oxoepothilone C in trace amounts, and the unexpected compound 11,12-dehydro-12,13-dihydro-13-oxoepothilone D as the major product. The other expected compound, 12,13-dihydro-13-oxoepothilone D, was not detected. The unexpected 13-oxo derivative produced indicates that the ER domain of module 5 has substrate-specificity requirements and suggests a second enzymatic role for the domain.


Antimicrobial Agents and Chemotherapy | 2007

The Antifungal Polyketide Ambruticin Targets the HOG Pathway

Leandro Vetcher; Hugo G. Menzella; Toshiaki Kudo; Takayuki Motoyama; Leonard Katz

ABSTRACT The polyketide ambruticin is an attractive candidate for drug development as an antifungal agent, but its mechanism of action has not yet been elucidated. Here we present evidence that ambruticin exerts its effect by targeting HOG, the osmotic stress control pathway, through Hik1, a group III histidine kinase.


Gene | 1994

Characterization of the macromolecular synthesis (MMS) operon from Listeria monocytogenes.

Randy Metzger; David P. Brown; Patrick Grealish; Michael J. Staver; James Versalovic; James R. Lupski; Leonard Katz

The macromolecular synthesis (MMS) operon consists of three genes: rpsU, which encodes the S21 ribosomal protein in Bacillus subtilis (Bs), rpsU is replaced by orfP23 which encodes a protein of unknown function), dnaG, encoding the DNA primase involved in the initiation of chromosome replication, and rpoD, which encodes the principal sigma subunit of RNA polymerase. The operon was cloned in three segments from Listeria monocytogenes (Lm), initially using a probe designed from a highly conserved region of RpoD. Analysis of the nucleotide sequence revealed three genes: orfP17 (whose product, P17, is homologous to Bs P23), dnaG and rpoD. The Lm DnaG resembles the primase from Escherichia coli through the first two-thirds of the sequence. C-terminal similarity was observed between DnaG from Lm and Bs. Lm RpoD is similar to Bs SigA, shares identical DNA-binding domains with SigA, and is a member of the sigma 43 subgroup of the sigma 70 family.


Gene | 1989

Gene dosage effect on the expression of the delta-endotoxin genes of Bacillus thuringiensis subsp. kurstaki in Bacillus subtilis and Bacillus megaterium

Annapur G. Shivakumar; Rita I. Vanags; David R. Wilcox; Leonard Katz; Patricia S. Vary; J. Lawrence Fox

Significant differences in expression of the delta-endotoxin genes cryA1 and cryA2 of Bacillus thuringiensis subsp. kurstaki were observed in B. subtilis and B. megaterium. The cryA1 gene was expressed when present on a high-copy-number (hcn) vector in B. megaterium but not in B. subtilis. The cryA2 gene was expressed in both hosts, but at a higher level in B. megaterium. Expression of the cryA2 gene in B. megaterium was better from a hcn vector than from a low copy number vector. Inhibition of sporulation was observed when the toxin genes were present on hcn plasmids in B. subtilis while no such effect was evident in B. megaterium. In addition, there was a significant reduction in copy numbers in both B. subtilis and B. megaterium when delta-endotoxin genes or a spoVG promoter-containing fragment of DNA were cloned into hcn plasmids.

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