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Dive into the research topics where Tingting Huang is active.

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Featured researches published by Tingting Huang.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2009

Characterization of the Polyoxin Biosynthetic Gene Cluster from Streptomyces cacaoi and Engineered Production of Polyoxin H

Wenqing Chen; Tingting Huang; Xinyi He; Qingqing Meng; Delin You; Linquan Bai; Jialiang Li; Mingxuan Wu; Rui Li; Zhoujie Xie; Huchen Zhou; Xiufen Zhou; Huarong Tan; Zixin Deng

A gene cluster (pol) essential for the biosynthesis of polyoxin, a nucleoside antibiotic widely used for the control of phytopathogenic fungi, was cloned from Streptomyces cacaoi. A 46,066-bp region was sequenced, and 20 of 39 of the putative open reading frames were defined as necessary for polyoxin biosynthesis as evidenced by its production in a heterologous host, Streptomyces lividans TK24. The role of PolO and PolA in polyoxin synthesis was demonstrated by in vivo experiments, and their functions were unambiguously characterized as O-carbamoyltransferase and UMP-enolpyruvyltransferase, respectively, by in vitro experiments, which enabled the production of a modified compound differing slightly from that proposed earlier. These studies should provide a solid foundation for the elucidation of the molecular mechanisms for polyoxin biosynthesis, and set the stage for combinatorial biosynthesis using genes encoding different pathways for nucleoside antibiotics.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2011

Identification and Characterization of the Pyridomycin Biosynthetic Gene Cluster of Streptomyces pyridomyceticus NRRL B-2517

Tingting Huang; Yemin Wang; Jun Yin; Yanhua Du; Meifeng Tao; Jing Xu; Wenqing Chen; Shuangjun Lin; Zixin Deng

Pyridomycin is a structurally unique antimycobacterial cyclodepsipeptide containing rare 3-(3-pyridyl)-l-alanine and 2-hydroxy-3-methylpent-2-enoic acid moieties. The biosynthetic gene cluster for pyridomycin has been cloned and identified from Streptomyces pyridomyceticus NRRL B-2517. Sequence analysis of a 42.5-kb DNA region revealed 26 putative open reading frames, including two nonribosomal peptide synthetase (NRPS) genes and a polyketide synthase gene. A special feature is the presence of a polyketide synthase-type ketoreductase domain embedded in an NRPS. Furthermore, we showed that PyrA functioned as an NRPS adenylation domain that activates 3-hydroxypicolinic acid and transfers it to a discrete peptidyl carrier protein, PyrU, which functions as a loading module that initiates pyridomycin biosynthesis in vivo and in vitro. PyrA could also activate other aromatic acids, generating three pyridomycin analogues in vivo.Pyridomycin is a structurally unique antimycobacterial cyclodepsipeptide containing rare 3-(3-pyridyl)-l-alanine and 2-hydroxy-3-methylpent-2-enoic acid moieties. The biosynthetic gene cluster for pyridomycin has been cloned and identified from Streptomyces pyridomyceticus NRRL B-2517. Sequence analysis of a 42.5-kb DNA region revealed 26 putative open reading frames, including two nonribosomal peptide synthetase (NRPS) genes and a polyketide synthase gene. A special feature is the presence of a polyketide synthase-type ketoreductase domain embedded in an NRPS. Furthermore, we showed that PyrA functioned as an NRPS adenylation domain that activates 3-hydroxypicolinic acid and transfers it to a discrete peptidyl carrier protein, PyrU, which functions as a loading module that initiates pyridomycin biosynthesis in vivo and in vitro. PyrA could also activate other aromatic acids, generating three pyridomycin analogues in vivo.


Microbial Cell Factories | 2013

Genetic dissection of the polyoxin building block-carbamoylpolyoxamic acid biosynthesis revealing the "pathway redundancy" in metabolic networks.

Wenqing Chen; Daofeng Dai; Changchun Wang; Tingting Huang; Lipeng Zhai; Zixin Deng

BackgroundPolyoxin, a peptidyl nucleoside antibiotic, consists of three building blocks including a nucleoside skeleton, polyoximic acid (POIA), and carbamoylpolyoxamic acid (CPOAA), however, little is known about the “pathway redundancy” of the metabolic networks directing the CPOAA biosynthesis in the cell factories of the polyoxin producer.ResultsHere we report the genetic characterization of CPOAA biosynthesis with revealing a “pathway redundancy” in metabolic networks. Independent mutation of the four genes (polL-N and polP) directly resulted in the accumulation of polyoxin I, suggesting their positive roles for CPOAA biosynthesis. Moreover, the individual mutant of polN and polP also partially retains polyoxin production, suggesting the existence of the alternative homologs substituting their functional roles.ConclusionsIt is unveiled that argA and argB in L-arginine biosynthetic pathway contributed to the “pathway redundancy”, more interestingly, argB in S. cacaoi is indispensible for both polyoxin production and L-arginine biosynthesis. These data should provide an example for the research on the “pathway redundancy” in metabolic networks, and lay a solid foundation for targeted enhancement of polyoxin production with synthetic biology strategies.


Applied and Environmental Microbiology | 2010

Enhancement of the Diversity of Polyoxins by a Thymine-7-Hydroxylase Homolog outside the Polyoxin Biosynthesis Gene Cluster

Changming Zhao; Tingting Huang; Wenqing Chen; Zixin Deng

ABSTRACT Polyoxins consist of 14 structurally variable components which differentiate at three branch sites of the carbon skeleton. Open reading frame (ORF) SAV_4805 of Streptomyces avermitilis, showing similarity to thymine-7-hydroxylase, was proved to enhance the diversity of polyoxins at the C-5 site of the 1-(5′-amino-5′-deoxy-β-d-allofuranuronosyl) pyrimidine moiety.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2017

Characterization of 2-Oxindole Forming Heme Enzyme MarE, Expanding the Functional Diversity of the Tryptophan Dioxygenase Superfamily

Yuyang Zhang; Yi Zou; Nelson L. Brock; Tingting Huang; Yingxia Lan; Xiaozheng Wang; Zixin Deng; Yi Tang; Shuangjun Lin

3-Substituted 2-oxindoles are important structural motifs found in many biologically active natural products and pharmaceutical lead compounds. Here, we report an enzymatic formation of the 3-substituted 2-oxindoles catalyzed by MarE in the maremycin biosynthetic pathway in Streptomyces sp. B9173. MarE is a homologue of FeII/heme-dependent tryptophan 2,3-dioxygenases (TDOs). Typical TDOs usually catalyze the insertion of two oxygen atoms from O2 into an indole ring to generate N-formylkynurenine (NFK)-like products. In contrast, MarE catalyzes the insertion of a single oxygen atom from O2 into an indole ring, to probably generate an epoxyindole intermediate that undergoes an unprecedented 2,3-hydride migration to form 2-oxindole structure. MarE shows substrate robustness to catalyze the conversion of a series of 3-substituted indoles into their corresponding 3-substituted 2-oxindoles. Although containing most key amino acid residues conserved in well-known TDO homologues, MarE falls into a separate new subgroup in the phylogenetic tree. The characterization of MarE and its homologue enriches the functional diversities of TDO superfamily and provides a new strategy for discovering novel natural products containing 3-substituted 2-oxindole pharmacophores by genome mining.


Science China-chemistry | 2016

Indole methylation protects diketopiperazine configuration in the maremycin biosynthetic pathway

Yingxia Lan; Yi Zou; Tingting Huang; Xiaozheng Wang; Nelson L. Brock; Zixin Deng; Shuangjun Lin

The maremycin biosynthetic gene cluster has been identified in Streptomyces sp. B9173. Comparative metabolic profiling with knockout mutant strains led to the identification of new products correlated to the maremycin biosynthesis, in particular the “demethyl”-maremycins with an unexpected D-tryptophan unit. A biosynthetic pathway for the maremycins is proposed and plausible reasoning for tryptophan epimerization in the demethylmaremycin biosynthesis is also provided.


ChemBioChem | 2016

Functional Characterization of PyrG, an Unusual Nonribosomal Peptide Synthetase Module from the Pyridomycin Biosynthetic Pathway

Tingting Huang; Lili Li; Nelson L. Brock; Zixin Deng; Shuangjun Lin

Pyridomycin is an antimycobacterial cyclodepsipeptide assembled by a nonribosomal peptide synthetase/polyketide synthase hybrid system. Analysis of its cluster revealed a nonribosomal peptide synthetase (NRPS) module, PyrG, that contains two tandem adenylation domains and a PKS‐type ketoreductase domain. In this study, we biochemically validated that the second A domain recognizes and activates α‐keto‐β‐methylvaleric acid (2‐KVC) as the native substrate; the first A domain was not functional but might play a structural role. The KR domain catalyzed the reduction of the 2‐KVC tethered to the peptidyl carrier protein of PyrG in the presence of the MbtH family protein, PyrH. PyrG was demonstrated to recognize many amino acids. This substrate promiscuity provides the potential to generate pyridomycin analogues with various enolic acids moiety; this is important for binding InhA, a critical enzyme for cell‐wall biosynthesis in Mycobacterium tuberculosis.


ACS Chemical Biology | 2018

NRPS Protein MarQ Catalyzes Flexible Adenylation and Specific S-Methylation

Tingting Huang; Yingyi Duan; Yi Zou; Zixin Deng; Shuangjun Lin

Maremycins are a group of structurally diverse 2,5-diketopiperazine natural products featuring a rare amino acid building block, S-methyl-l-cysteine (Me-Cys). Three freestanding nonribosomal peptide synthetase (NRPS) proteins from the maremycins biosynthetic pathway were proposed for the formation of the 2,5-diketopiperazine scaffold: MarQ, MarM, and MarJ. MarQ displays flexible adenylation activity toward Cys, Me-Cys, Ser, and ( S)-2,3-diaminopropanoic acid (DAP) and transfers these substrates to MarJ, which is the discrete peptidyl carrier protein (PCP). MarQ could also activate several other amino acids. The embedded methyltransferase (MT) domain in MarQ specifically catalyzes the thiol methylation of MarJ-tethered Cys. The in vitro reconstitution of MarQ and MarJ further provides clear evidence for the reaction sequence of methylation step on Cys. Our study on MarJ/Q tridomain cassette gains valuable insights into maremycins structure diversity and will be exploited to incorporate Me-Cys into natural products by combinatorial biosynthesis.


The Journal of Antibiotics | 2017

Xantholipin B produced by the stnR inactivation mutant Streptomyces flocculus CGMCC 4.1223 WJN-1

Sifan Wu; Tingting Huang; Dan Xie; Jing Wo; Xiaozheng Wang; Zixin Deng; Shuangjun Lin

Xantholipin is a polycyclic xanthone antibiotic that exhibits potent cytotoxic and antibacterial activity. In this study, a new xanthone-type antibiotic, xantholipin B (1), was isolated for the first time along with its known derivative, xantholipin (2), from strain WJN-1, an aminotransferase inactivation mutant of the streptonigrin-producer Streptomyces flocculus CGMCC 4.1223. The structure of 1 was established based on spectroscopic analysis and supports the previously proposed biosynthetic pathway as a key intermediate of 2. Moreover, 1 showed 3- to 10-fold greater cytotoxicity than 2 against a select panel of human cancer cell lines. In addition, 1 demonstrated powerful antimicrobial activity against both Gram-positive bacteria and fungi. Importantly, both 1 and 2 inhibited the methicillin-resistant strain Staphylococcus aureus Mu50, with the MIC value of 0.025u2009μgu2009ml−1. The new structural features of 1 enrich the structural diversity of xantholipin family compounds and shed new light on the structure–activity relationship of 1 as a promising antitumor drug candidate.


Molecular BioSystems | 2011

Identification of the gene cluster involved in muraymycin biosynthesis from Streptomyces sp. NRRL 30471

Lin Cheng; Wenqing Chen; Lipeng Zhai; Dongmei Xu; Tingting Huang; Shuangjun Lin; Xiufen Zhou; Zixin Deng

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Shuangjun Lin

Shanghai Jiao Tong University

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Wenqing Chen

Shanghai Jiao Tong University

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Yi Zou

Shanghai Jiao Tong University

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Nelson L. Brock

Shanghai Jiao Tong University

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Xiaozheng Wang

Shanghai Jiao Tong University

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Lipeng Zhai

Shanghai Jiao Tong University

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Xiufen Zhou

Shanghai Jiao Tong University

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Yingxia Lan

Shanghai Jiao Tong University

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Yingyi Duan

Shanghai Jiao Tong University

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