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Dive into the research topics where Thomas J. Simpson is active.

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Featured researches published by Thomas J. Simpson.


ChemBioChem | 2008

Authentic Heterologous Expression of the Tenellin Iterative Polyketide Synthase Nonribosomal Peptide Synthetase Requires Coexpression with an Enoyl Reductase

Laura M. Halo; James W. Marshall; Ahmed A. Yakasai; Zhongshu Song; Craig P. Butts; Matthew P. Crump; Mary N. Heneghan; Andy M. Bailey; Thomas J. Simpson; Colin M. Lazarus; Russell J. Cox

The tenS gene encoding tenellin synthetase (TENS), a 4239‐residue polyketide synthase nonribosomal‐peptide synthetase (PKS‐NRPS) from Beauveria bassiana, was expressed in Aspergillus oryzae M‐2‐3. This led to the production of three new compounds, identified as acyl tetramic acids, and numerous minor metabolites. Consideration of the structures of these compounds indicates that the putative C‐terminal thiolester reductase (R) domain does not act as a reductase, but appears to act as a Dieckmann cyclase (DKC). Expression of tenS in the absence of a trans‐acting ER component encoded by orf3 led to errors in assembly of the polyketide component, giving clues to the mode of programming of highly reducing fungal PKS. Coexpression of tenS with orf3 from the linked gene cluster led to the production of a correctly elaborated polyketide. The NRPS adenylation domain possibly shows the first identified fungal signature sequences for tyrosine selectivity.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2008

Late stage oxidations during the biosynthesis of the 2-pyridone tenellin in the entomopathogenic fungus Beauveria bassiana.

Laura M. Halo; Mary N. Heneghan; Ahmed A. Yakasai; Zhongshu Song; Katherine M. Williams; Andy M. Bailey; Russell J. Cox; Colin M. Lazarus; Thomas J. Simpson

Late stage oxidations during the biosynthesis of the 2-pyridone tenellin in the insect pathogenic fungus Beauveria bassiana were investigated by a combination of gene knockout, antisense RNA, and gene coexpression studies. Open reading frames (ORF) 3 and 4 of the tenellin biosynthetic gene cluster were previously shown to encode a trans-acting enoyl reductase and a hybrid polyketide synthase nonribosomal peptide synthetase (PKS-NRPS), respectively, which together synthesize the acyltetramic acid pretenellin-A. In this work, we have shown that ORF1 encodes a cytochrome P450 oxidase, which catalyzes an unprecedented oxidative ring expansion of pretenellin-A to form the 2-pyridone core of tenellin and related metabolites, and that this enzyme does not catalyze the formation of a hydroxylated precursor. Similar genes appear to be associated with PKS-NRPS genes in other fungi. ORF2 encodes an unusual cytochrome P450 monooxygenase required for the selective N-hydroxylation of the 2-pyridone which is incapable of N-hydroxylation of acyltetramic acids.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2011

Rational Domain Swaps Decipher Programming in Fungal Highly Reducing Polyketide Synthases and Resurrect an Extinct Metabolite

Katja M. Fisch; Walid Bakeer; Ahmed A. Yakasai; Zhongshu Song; Jennifer Pedrick; Zahida Wasil; Andy M. Bailey; Colin M. Lazarus; Thomas J. Simpson; Russell J. Cox

The mechanism of programming of iterative highly reducing polyketide synthases remains one of the key unsolved problems of secondary metabolism. We conducted rational domain swaps between the polyketide synthases encoding the biosynthesis of the closely related compounds tenellin and desmethylbassianin. Expression of the hybrid synthetases in Aspergillus oryzae led to the production of reprogrammed compounds in which the changes to the methylation pattern and chain length could be mapped to the domain swaps. These experiments reveal for the first time the origin of programming in these systems. Domain swaps combined with coexpression of two cytochrome P450 encoding genes from the tenellin biosynthetic gene cluster led to the resurrection of the extinct metabolite bassianin.


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

Genetic, molecular, and biochemical basis of fungal tropolone biosynthesis

Jack Davison; Ahmed al Fahad; Menghao Cai; Zhongshu Song; Samar Y. Yehia; Colin M. Lazarus; Andy M. Bailey; Thomas J. Simpson; Russell J. Cox

A gene cluster encoding the biosynthesis of the fungal tropolone stipitatic acid was discovered in Talaromyces stipitatus (Penicillium stipitatum) and investigated by targeted gene knockout. A minimum of three genes are required to form the tropolone nucleus: tropA encodes a nonreducing polyketide synthase which releases 3-methylorcinaldehyde; tropB encodes a FAD-dependent monooxygenase which dearomatizes 3-methylorcinaldehyde via hydroxylation at C-3; and tropC encodes a non-heme Fe(II)-dependent dioxygenase which catalyzes the oxidative ring expansion to the tropolone nucleus via hydroxylation of the 3-methyl group. The tropA gene was characterized by heterologous expression in Aspergillus oryzae, whereas tropB and tropC were successfully expressed in Escherichia coli and the purified TropB and TropC proteins converted 3-methylorcinaldehyde to a tropolone in vitro. Finally, knockout of the tropD gene, encoding a cytochrome P450 monooxygenase, indicated its place as the next gene in the pathway, probably responsible for hydroxylation of the 6-methyl group. Comparison of the T. stipitatus tropolone biosynthetic cluster with other known gene clusters allows clarification of important steps during the biosynthesis of other fungal compounds including the xenovulenes, citrinin, sepedonin, sclerotiorin, and asperfuranone.


PLOS ONE | 2011

A Natural Plasmid Uniquely Encodes Two Biosynthetic Pathways Creating a Potent Anti-MRSA Antibiotic

Daisuke Fukuda; Anthony S. Haines; Zhongshu Song; Annabel C. Murphy; Joanne Hothersall; Elton R. Stephens; Rachel Gurney; Russell J. Cox; John Crosby; Christine L. Willis; Thomas J. Simpson; Christopher M. Thomas

Background Understanding how complex antibiotics are synthesised by their producer bacteria is essential for creation of new families of bioactive compounds. Thiomarinols, produced by marine bacteria belonging to the genus Pseudoalteromonas, are hybrids of two independently active species: the pseudomonic acid mixture, mupirocin, which is used clinically against MRSA, and the pyrrothine core of holomycin. Methodology/Principal Findings High throughput DNA sequencing of the complete genome of the producer bacterium revealed a novel 97 kb plasmid, pTML1, consisting almost entirely of two distinct gene clusters. Targeted gene knockouts confirmed the role of these clusters in biosynthesis of the two separate components, pseudomonic acid and the pyrrothine, and identified a putative amide synthetase that joins them together. Feeding mupirocin to a mutant unable to make the endogenous pseudomonic acid created a novel hybrid with the pyrrothine via “mutasynthesis” that allows inhibition of mupirocin-resistant isoleucyl-tRNA synthetase, the mupirocin target. A mutant defective in pyrrothine biosynthesis was also able to incorporate alternative amine substrates. Conclusions/Significance Plasmid pTML1 provides a paradigm for combining independent antibiotic biosynthetic pathways or using mutasynthesis to develop a new family of hybrid derivatives that may extend the effective use of mupirocin against MRSA.


Nature Chemical Biology | 2013

A conserved motif flags acyl carrier proteins for β-branching in polyketide synthesis.

Anthony S. Haines; Xu Dong; Zhongshu Song; Rohit Farmer; Christopher Williams; Joanne Hothersall; Eliza Płoskoń; Pakorn Wattana-Amorn; Elton R. Stephens; Erika Yamada; Rachel Gurney; Yuiko Takebayashi; Joleen Masschelein; Russell J. Cox; Rob Lavigne; Christine L. Willis; Thomas J. Simpson; John Crosby; Peter J. Winn; Christopher M. Thomas; Matthew P. Crump

Type I PKSs often utilise programmed β-branching, via enzymes of an “HMG-CoA synthase (HCS) cassette”, to incorporate various side chains at the second carbon from the terminal carboxylic acid of growing polyketide backbones. We identified a strong sequence motif in Acyl Carrier Proteins (ACPs) where β-branching is known. Substituting ACPs confirmed a correlation of ACP type with β-branching specificity. While these ACPs often occur in tandem, NMR analysis of tandem β-branching ACPs indicated no ACP-ACP synergistic effects and revealed that the conserved sequence motif forms an internal core rather than an exposed patch. Modelling and mutagenesis identified ACP Helix III as a probable anchor point of the ACP-HCS complex whose position is determined by the core. Mutating the core affects ACP functionality while ACP-HCS interface substitutions modulate system specificity. Our method for predicting β-carbon branching expands the potential for engineering novel polyketides and lays a basis for determining specificity rules.


Chemical Science | 2014

Biosynthesis of thiomarinol A and related metabolites of Pseudoalteromonas sp. SANK 73390

Annabel C. Murphy; Shu-Shan Gao; Li-Chen Han; Simon Carobene; Daisuke Fukuda; Zhongshu Song; Joanne Hothersall; Russell J. Cox; John Crosby; Matthew P. Crump; Christopher M. Thomas; Christine L. Willis; Thomas J. Simpson

The biosynthesis of the mixed PKS-FAS-NRPS hybrid antibiotic thiomarinol A was investigated using feeding studies to both wild type and mutant strains of the marine bacterium Pseudoalteromonas. Particularly interesting features of the pathway include assembly of the 8-hydroxyoctanoic acid side-chain via chain extension of a C4-precursor (4-hydroxybutyrate), and construction of the pyrrothine unit from cysteine via (HolA-D, F-H) prior to intact incorporation into thiomarinol (catalysed by TmlU). A series of thiomarinol-related and other minor metabolites have been isolated from wild-type and mutant strains. The results of these investigations are rationalised in terms of the overall biosynthetic pathway.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2014

Biosynthesis of Mupirocin by Pseudomonas fluorescens NCIMB 10586 Involves Parallel Pathways

Shu-Shan Gao; Joanne Hothersall; Jien Wu; Annabel C. Murphy; Zhongshu Song; Elton R. Stephens; Christopher M. Thomas; Matthew P. Crump; Russell J. Cox; Thomas J. Simpson; Christine L. Willis

Mupirocin, a clinically important antibiotic produced via a trans-AT Type I polyketide synthase (PKS) in Pseudomonas fluorescens, consists of a mixture of mainly pseudomonic acids A, B, and C. Detailed metabolic profiling of mutant strains produced by systematic inactivation of PKS and tailoring genes, along with re-feeding of isolated metabolites to mutant stains, has allowed the isolation of a large number of novel metabolites, identification of the 10,11-epoxidase, and full characterization of the mupirocin biosynthetic pathway, which proceeds via major (10,11-epoxide) and minor (10,11-alkene) parallel pathways.


Applied Microbiology and Biotechnology | 2011

Manipulation of quorum sensing regulation in Pseudomonas fluorescens NCIMB 10586 to increase mupirocin production

Joanne Hothersall; Annabel C. Murphy; Zafar Iqbal; Genevieve S. Campbell; Elton R. Stephens; Jien Wu; Helen J. Cooper; Steve Atkinson; Paul Williams; John Crosby; Christine L. Willis; Russell J. Cox; Thomas J. Simpson; Christopher M. Thomas

Transcription of the 74xa0kb Pseudomonas fluorescens mupirocin [pseudomonic acid (PA)] biosynthesis cluster depends on quorum sensing-dependent regulation via the LuxI/LuxR homologues MupI/MupR. To facilitate analysis of novel PAs from pathway mutants, we investigated factors that affect mup gene expression. First, the signal produced by MupI was identified as N-(3-oxodecanoyl)homoserine lactone, but exogenous addition of this molecule did not activate mupirocin production prematurely nor did expression of mupI in trans increase metabolite production. Second, we confirmed that mupX, encoding an amidase/hydrolase that can degrade N-acylhomoserine lactones, is also required for efficient expression, consistent with its occurrence in a regulatory module linked to unrelated genes in P. fluorescens. Third, and most significantly, mupR expression in trans to wild type and mutants can increase production of antibiotic and novel intermediates up to 17-fold.


Angewandte Chemie | 2017

Selected Mutations Reveal New Intermediates in the Biosynthesis of Mupirocin and the Thiomarinol Antibiotics

Shu-Shan Gao; Luoyi Wang; Zhongshu Song; Joanne Hothersall; Elton R. Stevens; Jack Connolly; Peter J. Winn; Russell J. Cox; Matthew P. Crump; Paul R. Race; Christopher M. Thomas; Thomas J. Simpson; Christine L. Willis

Thiomarinol and mupirocin are assembled on similar polyketide/fatty acid backbones and exhibit potent antibiotic activity against methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA). They both contain a tetrasubstituted tetrahydropyran (THP) ring that is essential for biological activity. Mupirocin is a mixture of pseudomonic acids (PAs). Isolation of the novel compound mupirocinu2005P, which contains a 7-hydroxy-6-keto-substituted THP, from a ΔmupP strain and chemical complementation experiments confirm that the first step in the conversion of PA-B into the major product PA-A is oxidation at the C6u2005position. In addition, nine novel thiomarinol (TM) derivatives with different oxidation patterns decorating the central THP core were isolated after gene deletion (tmlF). These metabolites are in accord with the THP ring formation and elaboration in thiomarinol following a similar order to that found in mupirocin biosynthesis, despite the lack of some of the equivalent genes. Novel mupirocin-thiomarinol hybrids were also synthesized by mutasynthesis.

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