P48 A methyltransferase initiates terpene cyclization in teleocidin B biosynthesis
Monday, January 12, 2015
California Ballroom C and Santa Fe Room
Dr. Takayoshi Awakawa1, Mr. Takahiro Mori1, Mr. Lihan Zhang1, Dr. Toshiyuki Wakimoto1, Mr. Shotaro Hoshino1, Dr. Takuya Ito2, Prof. Jun Ishikawa3, Prof. Martin Tanner4 and Prof. Ikuro Abe1, (1)Graduate School of Pharmaceutical Sciences, The University of Tokyo, Tokyo, Japan, (2)Faculty of Pharmaceutical Sciences, Tokushima Bunri University, Tokushima, Japan, (3)Department of Bioactive Molecules, National Institute of Infectious Diseases, Tokyo, Japan, (4)Department of Chemistry, University of British Columbia, 
Vancouver, Canada
Teleocidin B is an indole terpenoid isolated from Streptomyces. Due to its unique chemical structure and ability to activate protein kinase C, it has attracted interest in the areas of organic chemistry and cell biology. Here, we report the identification of genes encoding enzymes for teleocidin B biosynthesis, including non-ribosomal peptide synthetase (tleA), P-450 monooxygenase (tleB), prenyltransferase (tleC), and methyltransferase (tleD). The tleD gene, which is located outside of the tleABC cluster on the chromosome, was identified by transcriptional analysis and heterologous expression. Remarkably, TleD not only installs a methyl group on the geranyl moiety of the precursor, but also facilitates the nucleophilic attack from the electron-rich indole to the resultant cation, to form the indole-fused six-membered ring. This is the first demonstration of a cation, generated from methylation, triggering successive terpenoid-ring closure. In this presentation, rare reverse-prenylation to attach geranyl group to indolactam V by TldC will be also discussed in detail, based on the enzyme structure.