Structural Insight into the Enzymatic Formation of Bacterial Stilbene

Takahiro Mori, Takayoshi Awakawa, Koichiro Shimomura, Yuri Saito, Dengfeng Yang, Hiroyuki Morita*, Ikuro Abe

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

23 Scopus citations

Abstract

In contrast to stilbene biosynthesis by type III polyketide synthase in plants, in bacteria stilbene is produced by the collaboration of two enzymes in Photorhabdus luminescens: the unusual β-ketosynthase StlD catalyzes the condensation of the β-ketoacyl starter with an α,β-unsaturated-acyl substrate (two C-C bond-forming reactions) to produce isopropylstyrylcyclohexanedione, which is subsequently converted to stilbene by the aromatase StlC. Here we report the in vitro characterizations of StlD and StlC, and the X-ray crystal structures of StlD. Interestingly, structure-based mutagenesis demonstrated that His302, within the conserved Cys-His-Asn triad, is not essential for the enzyme reaction, while Glu154 functions as a base-catalyst to activate the β-ketoacyl intermediate bound to the catalytic Cys126. The structures also revealed the presence of a putative nucleophilic water molecule activated by hydrogen bond networks with Glu154 and Ser340, suggesting that StlD employs novel catalytic machinery for the condensation of two acyl substrates to produce the cyclohexanedione scaffold.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)1468-1479
Number of pages12
JournalCell Chemical Biology
Volume23
Issue number12
DOIs
StatePublished - 2016/12/22

Keywords

  • biosynthesis
  • dialkyl condensing enzyme
  • enzymes
  • stilbene
  • structural biology

ASJC Scopus subject areas

  • Biochemistry
  • Molecular Medicine
  • Molecular Biology
  • Pharmacology
  • Drug Discovery
  • Clinical Biochemistry

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