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So, you want to know about siderophore synthesis

So, you want to know about siderophore synthesis. Presented by: Steven Backues Brooks Maki and Donnie Berkholz “The Invisible Man”. Hydroxamic Acid Groups. N-Alkylation of O-substituted Hydroxamic acid.

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So, you want to know about siderophore synthesis

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  1. So, you want to know about siderophore synthesis Presented by: Steven Backues Brooks Maki and Donnie Berkholz “The Invisible Man”

  2. Hydroxamic Acid Groups • N-Alkylation of O-substituted Hydroxamic acid. • Formation of an oxime from an aldehyde and a hydroxylamine. Followed by reduction and acylation • These derivatives allowed synthesis of several siderophores and their analogues

  3. Alternative Methods • Oxidation of Lysine and OrnithineWith DMD (dimethyldioxarine) • Conversion of primary amines to imines, with oxidation of imines to oxaziridines. Hydrolysis leads to hydroxylamines. • D-Ferrichrome synthesized by this method

  4. Danoxamine • Composed of a linear series of three hydroxamic acids. • Composed of two major groups linked by succinic acid.

  5. Biosynthesis of Siderophores How it’s really done.

  6. Hydroxamate Siderophores

  7. Step 1: Ornithine N5-Oxygenase • The formation of the N-O bond is the first committed step in hydroxamate synthesis • Ornithine, an amino acid used in the urea cycle, is reacted with O2 and NADPH to give an N-O bond at the end of its side chain.

  8. Step 2: N5-Transacylase • The nitrogen modified in this way is additionally attached to an acyl group carried by coenzyme A • This completes the hydroxamate prosthetic group

  9. The Hydroxamate prosthetic group:

  10. Step 3: Non-ribosomal Peptide Synthetase • This synthetase is a large complex with many subdomains, including an adenylation domain, a thiolation domain, and a condensation domain.

  11. Adenylation • First, the hydroxamate is is activated by addition of an adenylate group at its C terminus • The source of the adenylate group is ATP, and the reaction occurs with production of pyrophosphate

  12. Thiolation • The hydroxamate group is then transferred to the enzyme through the formation of a thioester linkage with displacement of the adenylate group.

  13. Condensation • Finally, the hydroxamate group is attached to another molecule (perhaps another hydroxamate group, or else a growing chain) by the nucleophilic attack of an OH or NH from the chain on the S-linked carbonyl, displacing the sulfur.

  14. Cathechols: Vibriobactin • Vibriobactin is a siderophore used by Vibrio cholerae • Its synthesis also involves a large, non-ribosomal peptide synthetase, and follows many of the same pathways as the synthesis of hydroxamate siderophores outlined above.

  15. Vibriobactin

  16. The Cathechol Prosthetic Group • The cathechol prosthetic group is 2,3-dihydroxybenzoic acid, which is formed from chorismic acid

  17. Nonribosomal Peptide Synthetase • 2,3-dihydrobenzoic acid then acts as a substrate for Vibirobactin Syntetase • It is first activated by adenylation, then transferred to the enzyme with formation of a thioester

  18. Transfer to Norspermidine • This thioester complex then undergoes nucleophilic attack by a primary amine on norspermidine. • The norspermidine/cathechol complex goes on to react with two more cathechol prosthetic groups (these, however, attached by threonine derived linkages) to form the final siderophore

  19. Norspermidine+cathecol

  20. Yersiniabactin

  21. Synthesis • Although it has neither hydroxamate nor cathechol groups, Yersiniabactin follows some of the same synthesis pathways, using a nonribosomal peptide sythetase that has clear homologies with, for example, vibriobactin sythetase

  22. Beginnings • Synthesis begins with salicylic acid (2-hydroxy-benzoic acid) • This is activated by the attachment of an adenylate group, then loaded onto the enzyme by the formation of a thioester, as before

  23. Elongation • At the same time, two cystines are also activated then loaded onto the same enzyme, also via a thioester linkage • Then, in the condensation/cyclization domain, the salicyate group is transferred onto one of the cystines, which is then cyclized. • This cyclization is an unusual property of this particular synthetaes

  24. Completion • A second cystine is added, and also cyclized, and the resulting molecule undergoes the addition of a malonyl group, S-adenosylmethionine, and an additional cystine to complete the synthesis

  25. Overview: • The use of a large, multidomain nonribosomal peptide synthetase was a common element of all of these syntheses. • All of these processes included the activation of a substrate by adenylation and the transfer to a thioester linkage with the enzyme, followed by condensation to form a longer chain. This is similar to the process followed in biosynthesis of fatty acids.

  26. References • Roosenberg, J.M. and Miller, M.J. Total Synthesis of the Siderophore Danoxamine. J. Org. Chem. 2000 Vol. 65 No. 16. 4833 – 4838. • Lin, Y. and Miller, M.J. Synthesis of Siderophore Components by and Indirect Oxidation Method. J. Org. Chem. 1999 Vol. 64 No. 20. 7451 – 7458. • Gaspar, M., Grazina, R., Bodor, A., Farkas, E., and Santos, M.A. Macrocyclic tetraamine tris(hydroxamate) ligand. J. Chem Soc. 1999 799 – 806. • Duhme, A.K. Synthesis of two dioxomolybdenum complexes of a siderophore analogue. J. Chem. Soc. 1997 773 – 778. • Atkinson, A. Bacterial Iron Transport. Biochemistry. 1998. 15965 - 15973

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