Engineering polyketide stereocenters with ketoreductase domain exchanges
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ABSTRACT: Polyketide synthases (PKSs) are versatile biosynthetic megasynthases capable of producing a diverse range of natural products with many applications, including in pharmaceuticals. The stereochemical precision of PKSs makes them a powerful tool for engineering tailored, unnatural polyketides; however, modifying the stereocenters of a PKS product while maintaining production levels remains a significant challenge. In this study, we systematically tested and evaluated strategies for ketoreductase (KR) domain exchanges, the domain responsible for setting stereocenters of polyketide products. After first optimizing the method for KR exchanges, we then performed 44 KR domain exchanges on three different PKSs to obtain high production of all four stereoisomers in vivo. By testing both one- and two-module PKS systems, we investigated how downstream modules process intermediates with altered stereochemistry and found that the configuration of the α-substituents was critical for gatekeeping by the ketosynthase (KS). To overcome this constraint, we investigated two different strategies for altering the KS domain, including introducing targeted mutations in the downstream KS, and exploring boundaries in exchanging the entire functional unit from the donor PKS. Both strategies successfully modified the KS stereocontrol with distinct tradeoffs; the functional unit exchange resulted in higher improvements, though it was more likely to break the entire PKS. This study demonstrates a comprehensive approach to successfully engineering all four stereochemical configurations in multiple PKS systems, advancing our understanding of and ability to rationally modify polyketide stereochemistry through multiple engineering strategies.
INSTRUMENT(S):
ORGANISM(S): Escherichia Coli
SUBMITTER:
Christopher Petzold
LAB HEAD: Christopher Petzold
PROVIDER: PXD066826 | Pride | 2025-12-01
REPOSITORIES: Pride
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