Phosphonates often exhibit biological activities by mimicking the phosphates and carboxylates of biological molecules. The phosphonate phosphonothrixin (PTX), produced by the soil-dwelling bacterium Saccharothrix sp. ST-888, exhibits herbicidal activity. In… Click to show full abstract
Phosphonates often exhibit biological activities by mimicking the phosphates and carboxylates of biological molecules. The phosphonate phosphonothrixin (PTX), produced by the soil-dwelling bacterium Saccharothrix sp. ST-888, exhibits herbicidal activity. In this study, we propose a complete biosynthetic pathway for PTX by reconstituting its biosynthesis in vitro. Our intensive analysis demonstrated that two dehydrogenases together reduce phosphonopyruvate (PnPy) to 2-hydroxy-3-phosphonopropanoic acid (HPPA) to accelerate the thermodynamically unfavorable rearrangement of phosphoenolpyruvate (PEP) to PnPy. The next four enzymes convert HPPA to (3-hydroxy-2-oxopropyl)phosphonic acid (HOPA). In the final stage of PTX biosynthesis, the "split-gene" transketolase homologue, PtxB5/6, catalyzes the transfer of a two-carbon unit attached to the thiamine diphosphate (TPP) cofactor (provided by the acetohydroxyacid synthase homologue, PtxB7) to HOPA to produce PTX. This study reveals a unique C-C bond formation in which two distinct TPP-dependent enzymes, PtxB5/6 and PtxB7, divide the work to transfer an acetyl group, highlighting an unprecedented biosynthetic strategy for natural products.
               
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