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Dive into the research topics where Liao-Bin Dong is active.

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Featured researches published by Liao-Bin Dong.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2016

Biosynthetic Origin of the Ether Ring in Platensimycin

Jeffrey D. Rudolf; Liao-Bin Dong; Karina Manoogian; Ben Shen

Platensimycin (PTM) and platencin (PTN) are highly functionalized bacterial diterpenoid natural products that target bacterial and mammalian fatty acid synthases. PTM and PTN feature varying diterpene-derived ketolides that are linked to the same 3-amino-2,4-dihydroxybenzoic acid moiety. As a result, PTM is a selective inhibitor for FabF/FabB, while PTN is a dual inhibitor of FabF/FabB and FabH. We previously determined that the PTM cassette, consisting of five genes found in the ptm, but not ptn, gene cluster, partitions the biosynthesis of the PTM and PTN diterpene-derived ketolides. We now report investigation of the PTM cassette through the construction of diterpene production systems in E. coli and genetic manipulation in the PTM-PTN dual overproducer Streptomyces platensis SB12029, revealing two genes, ptmT3 and ptmO5, that are responsible for the biosynthetic divergence between the PTM and PTN diterpene-derived ketolides. PtmT3, a type I diterpene synthase, was determined to be a (16R)-ent-kauran-16-ol synthase, the first of its kind found in bacteria. PtmO5, a cytochrome P450 monooxygenase, is proposed to catalyze the formation of the characteristic 11S,16S-ether ring found in PTM. Inactivation of ptmO5 in SB12029 afforded the ΔptmO5 mutant SB12036 that accumulated nine PTM and PTN congeners, seven of which were new, including seven 11-deoxy-16R-hydroxy-PTM congeners. The two fully processed PTM analogues showed antibacterial activities, albeit lower than that of PTM, indicating that the ether ring, or minimally the stereochemistry of the hydroxyl group at C-16, is crucial for the activity of PTM.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2016

Structure of the ent-Copalyl Diphosphate Synthase PtmT2 from Streptomyces platensis CB00739, a Bacterial Type II Diterpene Synthase

Jeffrey D. Rudolf; Liao-Bin Dong; Hongnan Cao; Catherine Hatzos-Skintges; Jerzy Osipiuk; Michael Endres; Chin-Yuan Chang; Ming Ma; Gyorgy Babnigg; Andrzej Joachimiak; George N. Phillips; Ben Shen

Terpenoids are the largest and most structurally diverse family of natural products found in nature, yet their presence in bacteria is underappreciated. The carbon skeletons of terpenoids are generated through carbocation-dependent cyclization cascades catalyzed by terpene synthases (TSs). Type I and type II TSs initiate cyclization via diphosphate ionization and protonation, respectively, and protein structures of both types are known. Most plant diterpene synthases (DTSs) possess three α-helical domains (αβγ), which are thought to have arisen from the fusion of discrete, ancestral bacterial type I TSs (α) and type II TSs (βγ). Type II DTSs of bacterial origin, of which there are no structurally characterized members, are a missing piece in the structural evolution of TSs. Here, we report the first crystal structure of a type II DTS from bacteria. PtmT2 from Streptomyces platensis CB00739 was verified as an ent-copalyl diphosphate synthase involved in the biosynthesis of platensimycin and platencin. The crystal structure of PtmT2 was solved at a resolution of 1.80 Å, and docking studies suggest the catalytically active conformation of geranylgeranyl diphosphate (GGPP). Site-directed mutagenesis confirmed residues involved in binding the diphosphate moiety of GGPP and identified DxxxxE as a potential Mg2+-binding motif for type II DTSs of bacterial origin. Finally, both the shape and physicochemical properties of the active sites are responsible for determining specific catalytic outcomes of TSs. The structure of PtmT2 fundamentally advances the knowledge of bacterial TSs, their mechanisms, and their role in the evolution of TSs.


Biochemical Pharmacology | 2017

Platensimycin and Platencin: Inspirations for Chemistry, Biology, Enzymology, and Medicine.

Jeffrey D. Rudolf; Liao-Bin Dong; Ben Shen

&NA; Natural products have served as the main source of drugs and drug leads, and natural products produced by microorganisms are one of the most prevalent sources of clinical antibiotics. Their unparalleled structural and chemical diversities provide a basis to investigate fundamental biological processes while providing access to a tremendous amount of chemical space. There is a pressing need for novel antibiotics with new mode of actions to combat the growing challenge of multidrug resistant pathogens. This review begins with the pioneering discovery and biological activities of platensimycin (PTM) and platencin (PTN), two antibacterial natural products isolated from Streptomyces platensis. The elucidation of their unique biochemical mode of action, structure‐activity relationships, and pharmacokinetics is presented to highlight key aspects of their biological activities. It then presents an overview of how microbial genomics has impacted the field of PTM and PTN and revealed paradigm‐shifting discoveries in terpenoid biosynthesis, fatty acid metabolism, and antibiotic and antidiabetic therapies. It concludes with a discussion covering the future perspectives of PTM and PTN in regard to natural products discovery, bacterial diterpenoid biosynthesis, and the pharmaceutical promise of PTM and PTN as antibiotics and for the treatment of metabolic disorders. PTM and PTN have inspired new discoveries in chemistry, biology, enzymology, and medicine and will undoubtedly continue to do so. Graphical abstract Figure. No caption available.


Organic Letters | 2016

A Mutasynthetic Library of Platensimycin and Platencin Analogues

Liao-Bin Dong; Jeffrey D. Rudolf; Ben Shen

Inactivation of ptmB1, ptmB2, ptmT2, or ptmC in Streptomyces platensis SB12029, a platensimycin (PTM) and platencin (PTN) overproducer, revealed that PTM and PTN biosynthesis features two distinct moieties that are individually constructed and convergently coupled to afford PTM and PTN. A focused library of PTM and PTN analogues was generated by mutasynthesis in the ΔptmB1 mutant S. platensis SB12032. Of the 34 aryl variants tested, 18 were incorporated with high titers.


Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry | 2016

Antibacterial sulfur-containing platensimycin and platencin congeners from Streptomyces platensis SB12029.

Liao-Bin Dong; Jeffrey D. Rudolf; Ben Shen

The platensimycin (PTM) and platencin (PTN) class of natural products are promising drug leads that target bacterial and mammalian fatty acid synthases. Natural congeners and synthetic analogues of PTM and PTN have been instrumental in determining their structure-activity relationships, with only a few analogues retaining the potencies of PTM and PTN. Here we describe the identification and isolation of two new sulfur-containing PTM congeners (3 and 5) from the engineered dual PTM-PTN overproducing Streptomyces platensis SB12029. Structure elucidation of platensimycin D1 (5), a sulfur-containing PTM pseudo-dimer, revealed the existence of its presumptive thioacid precursor (3). The unstable thioacid 3 was isolated and confirmed by structural characterization of its permethylated product (6). LC-MS analysis of crude extracts of SB12029 confirmed the presence of the thioacid analogue of PTN (4). The minimum inhibitory concentration (MIC) was determined for 5 revealing retention of the strong antibacterial activity of PTM.


The Journal of Antibiotics | 2018

Engineered production and evaluation of 6|[prime]|-deoxy-tallysomycin H-1 revealing new insights into the structure|[ndash]|activity relationship of the anticancer drug bleomycin

Dong Yang; Hindra; Liao-Bin Dong; Ivana Crnovcic; Ben Shen

The bleomycins (BLMs), a family of glycopeptide antibiotics, are currently used clinically in combination with a number of other agents for the treatment of malignant tumors. Other members of the BLM family include tallysomycins (TLMs), phleomycins and zorbamycin (ZBM). We previously cloned and characterized the biosynthetic gene clusters for BLMs, TLMs and ZBM. Applications of combinatorial biosynthesis strategies to the three biosynthetic machineries enabled the engineered production of several BLM analogs with unique structural characteristics and varying DNA cleavage activities, thereby providing an outstanding opportunity to study the structure–activity relationship (SAR) for the BLM family of anticancer drugs. We now report the engineered production of a new BLM–TLM–ZBM hybrid metabolite, named 6′-deoxy-TLM H-1, which consists of the 22-desmethyl-BLM aglycone, the TLM A C-terminal amine and the ZBM disaccharide, by heterologous expression of the zbmGL genes from the ZBM biosynthetic gene cluster in the Streptoalloteichus hindustanus ΔtlmH mutant strain SB8005. Evaluation of the DNA cleavage activities of 6′-deoxy-TLM H-1 as a measurement for its potential anticancer activity, in comparison with TLM H-1 and BLM A2, reveals new insight into the SAR of BLM family of anticancer drugs.


Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry | 2017

In vivo instability of platensimycin and platencin: Synthesis and biological evaluation of urea- and carbamate-platensimycin

Liao-Bin Dong; Jeffrey D. Rudolf; Li Lin; Claudia Ruiz; Michael D. Cameron; Ben Shen

Platensimycin (PTM) and platencin (PTN), two natural products and promising drug leads that target bacterial and mammalian fatty acid synthases, are known to have unfavorable pharmacokinetic properties. It is not clear, however, what the metabolic fates of PTM and PTN are and no efforts have been reported to address this key roadblock in the development of these compounds as viable drug options. Here we describe the pharmacokinetics of PTM and PTN, and reveal rapid renal clearance as the primary metabolic liability with three additional sites of chemical liability: (i) amide hydrolysis, (ii) glucuronidation, and (iii) oxidation. We determined that hydrolysis is a viable clearance mechanism in vivo and synthesized two PTM analogues to address in vivo hydrolysis. Urea- and carbamate-PTM analogues showed no detectable hydrolysis in vivo, at the expense of antibacterial activity, with no further improvement in systemic exposure. The antibacterial sulfur-containing analogues PTM D1 and PTM ML14 showed significant decreases in renal clearance. These studies set the stage for continued generation of PTM and PTN analogues in an effort to improve their pharmacokinetics while retaining or improving their biological activities.


Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2018

Activities of recombinant human bleomycin hydrolase on bleomycins and engineered analogues revealing new opportunities to overcome bleomycin-induced pulmonary toxicity

Ivana Crnovcic; Fei Gan; Dong Yang; Liao-Bin Dong; Peter G. Schultz; Ben Shen

The bleomycins (BLMs) are widely used in combination therapies for the treatment of various cancers. Dose-dependent and cumulative pulmonary toxicity is the major cause of BLM-associated morbidity, limiting the broad uses of BLMs as anticancer drugs. The organ specificity of BLM-induced toxicity has been correlated with the expression of the hBLMH gene, encoding the human bleomycin hydrolase (hBLMH), which is poorly expressed in the lung. hBLMH hydrolyzes BLMs into the biologically inactive deamido BLMs, thereby protecting organs from BLM-induced toxicity. Here we report (i) expression of hBLMH and production and isolation of recombinant human bleomycin hydrolase (rhBLMH) from E. coli, (ii) structural characterization of deamido BLM A2 and B2 isolated from rhBLMH-catalyzed hydrolysis of BLM A2 and B2, and (iii) kinetic characterization of the rhBLMH-catalyzed hydrolysis of BLM A2 and B2, in comparison with five BLM analogues. rhBLMH from E. coli catalyzes rapid and efficient hydrolysis of all BLMs tested, exhibiting a superior catalytic efficiency for BLM B2. These findings reveal new opportunities to overcome BLM-induced pulmonary toxicity in chemotherapies, potentially by exploring BLM B2 as the preferred congener, engineering designer BLMs with optimized activity for rhBLMH, or co-administrating rhBLMH directly into the lung as a potential protein therapeutic.


Nature Communications | 2018

Biosynthesis of thiocarboxylic acid-containing natural products

Liao-Bin Dong; Jeffrey D. Rudolf; Dingding Kang; Nan Wang; Cyndi Qixin He; Youchao Deng; Yong Huang; K. N. Houk; Yanwen Duan; Ben Shen

Thiocarboxylic acid-containing natural products are rare and their biosynthesis and biological significance remain unknown. Thioplatensimycin (thioPTM) and thioplatencin (thioPTN), thiocarboxylic acid congeners of the antibacterial natural products platensimycin (PTM) and platencin (PTN), were recently discovered. Here we report the biosynthetic origin of the thiocarboxylic acid moiety in thioPTM and thioPTN. We identify a thioacid cassette encoding two proteins, PtmA3 and PtmU4, responsible for carboxylate activation by coenzyme A and sulfur transfer, respectively. ThioPTM and thioPTN bind tightly to β-ketoacyl-ACP synthase II (FabF) and retain strong antibacterial activities. Density functional theory calculations of binding and solvation free energies suggest thioPTM and thioPTN bind to FabF more favorably than PTM and PTN. Additionally, thioacid cassettes are prevalent in the genomes of bacteria, implicating that thiocarboxylic acid-containing natural products are underappreciated. These results suggest that thiocarboxylic acid, as an alternative pharmacophore, and thiocarboxylic acid-containing natural products may be considered for future drug discovery.Thioplatensimycin (thioPTM) and thioplatencin (thioPTN) are recently discovered thiocarboxylic acid congeners of the antibacterial compounds PTM and PTN. Here, the authors identify a thioacid cassette encoding PtmA3 and PtmU4 that are responsible for carboxylate activation and sulfur transfer, respectively.


Nature Chemical Biology | 2018

Natural separation of the acyl-CoA ligase reaction results in a non-adenylating enzyme

Nan Wang; Jeffrey D. Rudolf; Liao-Bin Dong; Jerzy Osipiuk; Catherine Hatzos-Skintges; Michael Endres; Chin-Yuan Chang; Gyorgy Babnigg; Andrzej Joachimiak; George N. Phillips; Ben Shen

Acyl-coenzyme A (CoA) ligases catalyze the activation of carboxylic acids via a two-step reaction of adenylation followed by thioesterification. Here, we report the discovery of a non-adenylating acyl-CoA ligase PtmA2 and the functional separation of an acyl-CoA ligase reaction. Both PtmA1 and PtmA2, two acyl-CoA ligases from the biosynthetic pathway of platensimycin and platencin, are necessary for the two steps of CoA activation. Gene inactivation of ptmA1 and ptmA2 resulted in the accumulation of free acid and adenylate intermediates, respectively. Enzymatic and structural characterization of PtmA2 confirmed its ability to only catalyze thioesterification. Structural characterization of PtmA2 revealed it binds both free acid and adenylate substrates and undergoes the established mechanism of domain alternation. Finally, site-directed mutagenesis restored both the adenylation and complete CoA activation reactions. This study challenges the currently accepted paradigm of adenylating enzymes and inspires future investigations on functionally separated acyl-CoA ligases and their ramifications in biology.Functional and structural characterization of PtmA2 reveals that it is an unusual non-adenylating acyl-CoA ligase and part of a system wherein the canonical acyl-CoA ligase reaction is separated into two half-reactions performed by distinct enzymes.

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Ben Shen

Scripps Research Institute

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Jeffrey D. Rudolf

Scripps Research Institute

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Dong Yang

Scripps Research Institute

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Ivana Crnovcic

Scripps Research Institute

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Andrzej Joachimiak

Argonne National Laboratory

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Chin-Yuan Chang

Scripps Research Institute

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Gyorgy Babnigg

Argonne National Laboratory

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Hindra

Scripps Research Institute

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