Discovery of the Class I Antimicrobial Lasso Peptide Arcumycin

ChemBioChem ◽  
2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Lydia Stariha ◽  
Dewey McCafferty
Keyword(s):  
Class I ◽  
2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Lydia Stariha ◽  
Dewey G. McCafferty

<p>Lasso peptides are a structurally diverse superfamily of</p><p>conformationally-constrained peptide natural products, of which a</p><p>subset exhibits broad antimicrobial activity. Although advances in</p><p>bioinformatics have increased our knowledge of strains harboring</p><p>the biosynthetic machinery for lasso peptide production, relating</p><p>peptide sequence to bioactivity remains a continuous challenge.</p><p>Towards this end, a structure-driven genome mining investigation</p><p>of Actinobacteria-produced antimicrobial lasso peptides was</p><p>performed to correlate predicted primary structure with antibiotic</p><p>activity. Bioinformatic evaluation revealed eight putative novel</p><p>class I lasso peptide sequences. This subset is predicted to</p><p>possess antibiotic activity as characterized members of this class</p><p>have both broad spectrum and potent activity against Gram positive</p><p>strains. Fermentation of one of these hits, Streptomyces</p><p>NRRL F-5639, resulted in the production of a novel class I lasso</p><p>peptide, arcumycin, named for the Latin word for bow or arch,</p><p>arcum. Arcumycin exhibited antibiotic activity against Gram positive</p><p>bacteria including <i>Bacillus subtilis</i> (4 μg/mL),</p><p><i>Staphylococcus aureus </i>(8 μg/mL), and <i>Micrococcus luteus</i> (8</p><p>μg/mL). Arcumycin treatment of <i>B. subtilis</i> liaI-β-gal promoter</p><p>fusion reporter strain resulted in upregulation of the system liaRS</p><p>by the promoter liaI, indicating arcumycin interferes with lipid II</p><p>biosynthesis. Cumulatively, the results illustrate the relationship</p><p>between phylogenetically related lasso peptides and their</p><p>bioactivity as validated through the isolation, structural</p><p>determination, and evaluation of bioactivity of the novel class I</p><p>antimicrobial lasso peptide arcumycin.</p>


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Lydia Stariha ◽  
Dewey G. McCafferty

<p>Lasso peptides are a structurally diverse superfamily of</p><p>conformationally-constrained peptide natural products, of which a</p><p>subset exhibits broad antimicrobial activity. Although advances in</p><p>bioinformatics have increased our knowledge of strains harboring</p><p>the biosynthetic machinery for lasso peptide production, relating</p><p>peptide sequence to bioactivity remains a continuous challenge.</p><p>Towards this end, a structure-driven genome mining investigation</p><p>of Actinobacteria-produced antimicrobial lasso peptides was</p><p>performed to correlate predicted primary structure with antibiotic</p><p>activity. Bioinformatic evaluation revealed eight putative novel</p><p>class I lasso peptide sequences. This subset is predicted to</p><p>possess antibiotic activity as characterized members of this class</p><p>have both broad spectrum and potent activity against Gram positive</p><p>strains. Fermentation of one of these hits, Streptomyces</p><p>NRRL F-5639, resulted in the production of a novel class I lasso</p><p>peptide, arcumycin, named for the Latin word for bow or arch,</p><p>arcum. Arcumycin exhibited antibiotic activity against Gram positive</p><p>bacteria including <i>Bacillus subtilis</i> (4 μg/mL),</p><p><i>Staphylococcus aureus </i>(8 μg/mL), and <i>Micrococcus luteus</i> (8</p><p>μg/mL). Arcumycin treatment of <i>B. subtilis</i> liaI-β-gal promoter</p><p>fusion reporter strain resulted in upregulation of the system liaRS</p><p>by the promoter liaI, indicating arcumycin interferes with lipid II</p><p>biosynthesis. Cumulatively, the results illustrate the relationship</p><p>between phylogenetically related lasso peptides and their</p><p>bioactivity as validated through the isolation, structural</p><p>determination, and evaluation of bioactivity of the novel class I</p><p>antimicrobial lasso peptide arcumycin.</p>


Author(s):  
T. A. Stewart ◽  
D. Liggitt ◽  
S. Pitts ◽  
L. Martin ◽  
M. Siegel ◽  
...  

Insulin-dependant (Type I) diabetes mellitus (IDDM) is a metabolic disorder resulting from the lack of endogenous insulin secretion. The disease is thought to result from the autoimmune mediated destruction of the insulin producing ß cells within the islets of Langerhans. The disease process is probably triggered by environmental agents, e.g. virus or chemical toxins on a background of genetic susceptibility associated with particular alleles within the major histocompatiblity complex (MHC). The relation between IDDM and the MHC locus has been reinforced by the demonstration of both class I and class II MHC proteins on the surface of ß cells from newly diagnosed patients as well as mounting evidence that IDDM has an autoimmune pathogenesis. In 1984, a series of observations were used to advance a hypothesis, in which it was suggested that aberrant expression of class II MHC molecules, perhaps induced by gamma-interferon (IFN γ) could present self antigens and initiate an autoimmune disease. We have tested some aspects of this model and demonstrated that expression of IFN γ by pancreatic ß cells can initiate an inflammatory destruction of both the islets and pancreas and does lead to IDDM.


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