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Microbiology 149 (2003), 1633-1645; DOI  10.1099/mic.0.26310-0
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Microbiology 149 (2003), 1633-1645; DOI  10.1099/mic.0.26310-0
© 2003 Society for General Microbiology

Cloning, sequencing and heterologous expression of the medermycin biosynthetic gene cluster of Streptomyces sp. AM-7161: towards comparative analysis of the benzoisochromanequinone gene clusters

Koji Ichinose, Makoto Ozawa, Keiko Itou, Kanako Kunieda and Yutaka Ebizuka

Graduate School of Pharmaceutical Sciences, The University of Tokyo, Hongo, Bunkyo-ku, Tokyo 113-0033, Japan

Correspondence
Koji Ichinose
ichinose{at}mol.f.u-tokyo.ac.jp

Medermycin is a Streptomyces aromatic C-glycoside antibiotic classified in the benzoisochromanequinones (BIQs), which presents several interesting biosynthetic problems concerning polyketide synthase (PKS), post-PKS tailoring and deoxysugar pathways. The biosynthetic gene cluster for medermycin (the med cluster) was cloned from Streptomyces sp. AM-7161. Completeness of the clone was proved by the heterologous expression of a cosmid carrying the entire med cluster in Streptomyces coelicolor CH999 to produce medermycin. The DNA sequence of the cosmid (36 202 bp) revealed 34 complete ORFs, with an incomplete ORF at either end. Functional assignment of the deduced products was made for PKS and biosynthetically related enzymes, tailoring steps including strereochemical control, oxidation, angolosamine pathway, C-glycosylation, and regulation. The med cluster was estimated to be about 30 kb long, covering 29 ORFs. An unusual characteristic of the cluster is the disconnected organization of the minimal PKS genes: med-ORF23 encoding the acyl carrier protein is 20 kb apart from med-ORF1 and med-ORF2 for the two ketosynthase components. Secondly, the six genes (med-ORF14, 15, 16, 17, 18 and 20) for the biosynthesis of the deoxysugar, angolosamine, are all contiguous. Finally, the finding of a glycosyltransferase gene, med-ORF8, suggests a possible involvement of conventional C-glycosylation in medermycin biosynthesis. Comparison among the three complete BIQ gene clusters – med and those for actinorhodin (act) and granaticin (gra) – revealed some common genes whose deduced functions are unavailable from database searches (the ‘unknowns’). An example is med-ORF5, a homologue of actVI-ORF3 and gra-ORF18, which was highlighted by a recent proteomic analysis of S. coelicolor A3(2).


Abbreviations: ACP, acyl carrier protein; ARO, aromatase; BIQ, benzoisochromanequinone; CYC, cyclase; DOH, deoxyhexose; GT, glycosyltransferase; KR, ketoreductase; KS, ketosynthase; PKS, polyketide synthase

This paper is dedicated to Professor Sir David Hopwood, a pioneer in the field of Streptomyces research, on the occasion of his 70th birthday.

The GenBank accession number for the sequence reported in this paper is AB103463.

1H and 13C-NMR spectra of medermycin isolated from S. coelicolor CH999/pIK340 are available as supplementary data with the online version of this paper at http://mic.sgmjournals.org.




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