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Dive into the research topics where Peter F. Leadlay is active.

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Featured researches published by Peter F. Leadlay.


Structure | 1996

How coenzyme B12 radicals are generated: the crystal structure of methylmalonyl-coenzyme A mutase at 2 å resolution

Filippo Mancia; N.H. Keep; Atsushi Nakagawa; Peter F. Leadlay; Sean McSweeney; Bjarne Rasmussen; Peter Bö secke; Olivier Diat; Philip R. Evans

BACKGROUND The enzyme methylmalonyl-coenzyme A (CoA) mutase, an alphabeta heterodimer of 150 kDa, is a member of a class of enzymes that uses coenzyme B12 (adenosylcobalamin) as a cofactor. The enzyme induces the formation of an adenosyl radical from the cofactor. This radical then initiates a free-radical rearrangement of its substrate, succinyl-CoA, to methylmalonyl-CoA. RESULTS Reported here is the crystal structure at 2 A resolution of methylmalonyl-CoA mutase from Propionibacterium shermanii in complex with coenzyme B12 and with the partial substrate desulpho-CoA (lacking the succinyl group and the sulphur atom of the substrate). The coenzyme is bound by a domain which shares a similar fold to those of flavodoxin and the B12-binding domain of methylcobalamin-dependent methionine synthase. The cobalt atom is coordinated, via a long bond, to a histidine from the protein. The partial substrate is bound along the axis of a (beta/alpha)8 TIM barrel domain. CONCLUSIONS The histidine-cobalt distance is very long (2.5 A compared with 1.95-2.2 A in free cobalamins), suggesting that the enzyme positions the histidine in order to weaken the metal-carbon bond of the cofactor and favour the formation of the initial radical species. The active site is deeply buried, and the only access to it is through a narrow tunnel along the axis of the TIM barrel domain.


Nature Biotechnology | 2007

Complete genome sequence of the erythromycin-producing bacterium Saccharopolyspora erythraea NRRL23338

Markiyan Oliynyk; Markiyan Samborskyy; John Lester; Tatiana Mironenko; Nataliya Scott; Shilo Dickens; Stephen F. Haydock; Peter F. Leadlay

Saccharopolyspora erythraea is used for the industrial-scale production of the antibiotic erythromycin A, derivatives of which play a vital role in medicine. The sequenced chromosome of this soil bacterium comprises 8,212,805 base pairs, predicted to encode 7,264 genes. It is circular, like those of the pathogenic actinomycetes Mycobacterium tuberculosis and Corynebacterium diphtheriae, but unlike the linear chromosomes of the model actinomycete Streptomyces coelicolor A3(2) and the closely related Streptomyces avermitilis. The S. erythraea genome contains at least 25 gene clusters for production of known or predicted secondary metabolites, at least 72 genes predicted to confer resistance to a range of common antibiotic classes and many sets of duplicated genes to support its saprophytic lifestyle. The availability of the genome sequence of S. erythraea will improve insight into its biology and facilitate rational development of strains to generate high-titer producers of clinically important antibiotics.


Nature | 1999

A chain initiation factor common to both modular and aromatic polyketide synthases

Christian Bisang; Paul F. Long; Jesús Corte´s; James Westcott; John Crosby; Anne-Lise Matharu; Russell J. Cox; Thomas J. Simpson; James Staunton; Peter F. Leadlay

Antibiotic-producing polyketide synthases (PKSs) are enzymes responsible for the biosynthesis in Streptomyces and related filamentous bacteria of a remarkably broad range of bioactive metabolites, including antitumour aromatic compounds such as mithramycin and macrolide antibiotics such as erythromycin. The molecular basis for the selection of the starter unit on aromatic PKSs is unknown. Here we show that a component of aromatic PKS, previously named ‘chain-length factor’, is a factor required for polyketide chain initiation and that this factor has decarboxylase activity towards malonyl-ACP (acyl carrier protein). We have re-examined the mechanism of initiation on modular PKSs and have identified as a specific initiation factor a domain of previously unknown function named KSQ, which operates like chain-length factor. Both KSQ and chain-length factor are similar to the ketosynthase domains that catalyse polyketide chain extension in modular multifunctional PKSs and in aromatic PKSs, respectively, except that the ketosynthase domain active-site cysteine residue is replaced by a highly conserved glutamine in KSQ and in chain-length factor. The glutamine residue is important both for decarboxylase activity and for polyketide synthesis.


FEBS Letters | 1995

Divergent sequence motifs correlated with the substrate specificity of (methyl)malonyl-CoA:acyl carrier protein transacylase domains in modular polyketide synthases

Stephen F. Haydock; Jesús F. Aparicio; István Molnár; Torsten Schwecke; Lake Ee Khaw; Ariane König; Andrew F.A. Marsden; Ian S. Galloway; James Staunton; Peter F. Leadlay

The amino acid sequences of a large number of polyketide synthase domains that catalyse the transacylation of either methylmalonyl‐CoA or malonyl‐CoA onto acyl carrier protein (ACP) have been compared. Regions were identified in which the acyltransferase sequences diverged according to whether they were specific for malonyl‐CoA or methylmalonyl‐CoA. These differences are sufficiently clear to allow unambiguous assignment of newly‐sequenced acyltransferase domains in modular polyketide synthases. Comparison with the recently‐determined structure of the malonyltransferase from Escherichia coli fatty acid synthase showed that the divergent region thus identified lies near the acyltransferase active site, though not close enough to make direct contact with bound substrate.


Chemistry & Biology | 1996

A hybrid modular polyketide synthase obtained by domain swapping

Markiyan Oliynyk; Murray J.B. Brown; Jesús Cortés; James Staunton; Peter F. Leadlay

BACKGROUND Modular polyketide synthases govern the synthesis of a number of medically important antibiotics, and there is therefore great interest in understanding how genetic manipulation may be used to produce hybrid synthases that might synthesize novel polyketides. In particular, we aimed to show whether an individual domain can be replaced by a comparable domain from a different polyketide synthase to form a functional hybrid enzyme. To simplify the analysis, we have used our previously-developed model system DEBS1-TE, consisting of the first two chain-extension modules of the erythromycin-producing polyketide synthase of Saccharopolyspora erythraea. RESULTS We show here that replacing the entire acyltransferase (AT) domain from module 1 of DEBS1-TE by the AT domain from module 2 of the rapamycin-producing polyketide synthase leads, as predicted, to the synthesis of two novel triketide lactones in good yield, in place of the two lactones produced by DEBS1-TE. Both of the novel products specifically lack a methyl group at C-4 of the lactone ring. CONCLUSIONS Although the AT domain is a core structural domain of a modular polyketide synthase, it has been swapped to generate a truly hybrid multienzyme with a rationally altered specificity of chain extension. Identical manipulations carried out on known polyketide antibiotics might therefore generate families of potentially useful analogues that are inaccessible by chemical synthesis. These results also encourage the belief that other domains may be similarly swapped.


Chemistry & Biology | 2001

Role of type II thioesterases: evidence for removal of short acyl chains produced by aberrant decarboxylation of chain extender units.

Michelle L. Heathcote; James Staunton; Peter F. Leadlay

BACKGROUND Modular polyketide synthases (PKSs) function as molecular assembly lines in which polyketide chains are assembled by successive addition of chain extension units. At the end of the assembly line, there is usually a covalently linked type I thioesterase domain (TE I), which is responsible for release of the completed acyl chain from its covalent link to the synthase. Additionally, some PKS clusters contain a second thioesterase gene (TE II) for which there is no established role. Disruption of the TE II genes from several PKS clusters has shown that the TE II plays an important role in maintaining normal levels of antibiotic production. It has been suggested that the TE II fulfils this role by removing aberrant intermediates that might otherwise block the PKS complex. RESULTS We show that recombinant tylosin TE II behaves in vitro as a TE towards a variety of N-acetylcysteamine and p-nitrophenyl esters. The trends of hydrolytic activity determined by the kinetic parameter k(cat)/K(M) for the analogues tested indicates that simple fatty acyl chains are effective substrates. Analogues that modelled aberrant forms of putative tylosin biosynthetic intermediates were hydrolysed at low rates. CONCLUSIONS The behaviour of tylosin TE II in vitro is consistent with its proposed role as an editing enzyme. Aberrant decarboxylation of a malonate-derived moiety attached to an acyl carrier protein (ACP) domain may generate an acetate, propionate or butyrate residue on the ACP thiol. Our results suggest that removal of such groups is a significant role of TE II.


Chemistry & Biology | 2003

The structure of docking domains in modular polyketide synthases.

R. William Broadhurst; Daniel Nietlispach; Michael P Wheatcroft; Peter F. Leadlay; Kira J. Weissman

Polyketides from actinomycete bacteria provide the basis for many valuable medicines, so engineering genes for their biosynthesis to produce variant molecules holds promise for drug discovery. The modular polyketide synthases are particularly amenable to this approach, because each cycle of chain extension is catalyzed by a different module of enzymes, and the modules are arranged within giant multienzyme subunits in the order in which they act. Protein-protein interactions between terminal docking domains of successive multienzymes promote their correct positioning within the assembly line, but because the overall complex is not stable in vitro, the key interactions have not been identified. We present here the NMR solution structure of a 120 residue polypeptide representing a typical pair of such domains, fused at their respective C and N termini: it adopts a stable dimeric structure which reveals the detailed role of these (predominantly helical) domains in docking and dimerization by modular polyketide synthases.


FEBS Letters | 1992

Identification of DEBS 1, DEBS 2 and DEBS 3, the multienzyme polypeptides of the erythromycin-producing polyketide synthase from Saccharopolyspora erythraea

Patrick Caffrey; Debra J. Bevitt; James Staunton; Peter F. Leadlay

The ery A region of the erythromycin biosynthetic gene cluster of Saccharopolyspora erythraea has previously been shown to contain three large open reading frames (ORFs) that encode the components of 6‐deoxyerythronolide B synthase (DEBS). Polyclonal antibodies were raised against recombinant proteins obtained by overexpression of 3′ regions of the ORF2 and ORF3 genes. In Western blotting experiments, each antiserum reacted strongly with a different high molecular weight protein in extracts of erythromycin‐producing S. erythraea cells. These putative DEBS 2 and DEBS 3 proteins were purified and subjected to N‐terminal sequence analysis. The protein sequences were entirely consistent with the translation start sites predicted from the DNA sequences of ORFs 2 and 3. A third high molecular weight protein co‐purified with DEBS 2 and DEBS 3 and had an N‐terminal sequence that matched a protein sequence translated from the DNA sequence some 155 base pairs upstream from the previously proposed start codon of ORF1.


Molecular Genetics and Genomics | 1991

Cloning and sequence analysis of genes involved in erythromycin biosynthesis in Saccharopolyspora erythraea: sequence similarities between EryG and a family of S-adenosylmethionine-dependent methyltransferases

Stephen F. Haydock; James A. Dowson; Namrita Dhillon; Gareth A. Roberts; Jesús Cortés; Peter F. Leadlay

SummaryThe gene cluster (ery) responsible for production of the macrolide antibiotic erythromycin by Saccharopolyspora erythraea is also known to contain ermE, the gene conferring resistance to the antibiotic. The nucleotide sequence has been determined of a 4.5 kb portion of the biosynthetic gene cluster, from a region lying between 3.7 kb and 8.2 kb 3′ of ermE. This has revealed the presence of four complete open reading frames, including the previously known ery gene eryG, which catalyses the last step in the biosynthetic pathway. Comparison of the amino acid sequence of EryG with the sequence of other S-adenosylmethionine (SAM)-dependent methyltransferases has revealed that one of the sequence motifs previously suggested to be part of the SAM-binding site is present not only in EryG but also in many other recently sequenced SAM-dependent methyltransferases. Previous genetic studies have shown that this region also contains gene(s) involved in hydroxylation of the intermediate 6-deoxyerythronolide B. One of the three other open reading frames (eryf) in fact shows very high sequence similarity to known cytochrome P450 hydroxylases. An adjacent gene (ORF5) shows a strikingly high degree of similarity to prokaryotic and eukaryotic acyltransferases and thioesterases.


Molecular Microbiology | 2003

Analysis of the biosynthetic gene cluster for the polyether antibiotic monensin in Streptomyces cinnamonensis and evidence for the role of monB and monC genes in oxidative cyclization.

Markiyan Oliynyk; Christian B. W. Stark; Apoorva Bhatt; Michelle A. Jones; Zoë A. Hughes‐Thomas; Christopher J. Wilkinson; Zoryana Oliynyk; Yuliya Demydchuk; James Staunton; Peter F. Leadlay

The analysis of a candidate biosynthetic gene cluster (97 kbp) for the polyether ionophore monensin from Streptomyces cinnamonensis has revealed a modular polyketide synthase composed of eight separate multienzyme subunits housing a total of 12 extension modules, and flanked by numerous other genes for which a plausible function in monensin biosynthesis can be ascribed. Deletion of essentially all these clustered genes specifically abolished monensin production, while overexpression in S. cinnamonensis of the putative pathway‐specific regulatory gene monR led to a fivefold increase in monensin production. Experimental support is presented for a recently‐proposed mechanism, for oxidative cyclization of a linear polyketide intermediate, involving four enzymes, the products of monBI, monBII, monCI and monCII. In frame deletion of either of the individual genes monCII (encoding a putative cyclase) or monBII (encoding a putative novel isomerase) specifically abolished monensin production. Also, heterologous expression of monCI, encoding a flavin‐linked epoxidase, in S. coelicolor was shown to significantly increase the ability of S. coelicolor to epoxidize linalool, a model substrate for the presumed linear polyketide intermediate in monensin biosynthesis.

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Hui Hong

University of Cambridge

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Rose M. Sheridan

St. Jude Children's Research Hospital

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