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Vitamin B3 Triggers Biosynthesis of Secondary Metabolite Dormancy Signals in Streptococcus suis.

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Human-associated streptococci have not been viewed as productive sources of natural products. Against expectation, bioinformatic searches recently revealed a large collection of diverse biosynthetic gene clusters coding for ribosomally synthesized… Click to show full abstract

Human-associated streptococci have not been viewed as productive sources of natural products. Against expectation, bioinformatic searches recently revealed a large collection of diverse biosynthetic gene clusters coding for ribosomally synthesized and post-translationally modified peptides (RiPPs) in streptococcal genomes. The most abundant of these, the tqq gene cluster, is specific to Streptococcus suis, a burdensome agricultural pathogen and zoonotic agent. Herein, we used high-throughput elicitor screening to identify both small molecule elicitors and products of the tqq cluster. We show that the B3 vitamin niacin effectively elicits the tqq cluster leading to the biosynthesis of a family of RiPP natural products, which we termed threoglucins and characterized structurally. The defining feature of threoglucins is an aliphatic ether bond giving rise to a substituted 1,3-oxazinane heterocycle in the peptide backbone. Isolation of 22 congeners of threoglucins facilitated structure activity relationship studies, demonstrating the requirement for the oxazinane substructure and a Trp-Tyr C-terminal dyad for biological activity, namely antibiotic persistence and allolysis at low and high doses, respectively. Potential therapeutic applications of threoglucins are discussed.

Keywords: metabolite dormancy; triggers biosynthesis; secondary metabolite; biosynthesis secondary; streptococcus suis; vitamin triggers

Journal Title: Journal of the American Chemical Society
Year Published: 2022

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