Structural insights into nonribosomal peptide enzymatic assembly lines

Nat Prod Rep. 2009 Aug;26(8):987-1000. doi: 10.1039/b904543k. Epub 2009 May 22.

Abstract

Nonribosomal peptides have a variety of medicinal activities including activity as antibiotics, antitumor drugs, immunosuppressives, and toxins. Their biosynthesis on multimodular assembly lines as a series of covalently tethered thioesters, in turn covalently attached on pantetheinyl arms on carrier protein way stations, reflects similar chemical logic and protein machinery to fatty acid and polyketide biosynthesis. While structural information on excised or isolated catalytic adenylation (A), condensation (C), peptidyl carrier protein (PCP) and thioesterase (TE) domains had been gathered over the past decade, little was known about how the NRPS catalytic and carrier domains interact with each other both within and across elongation or termination modules. This Highlight reviews recent breakthrough achievements in both X-ray and NMR spectroscopic studies that illuminate the architecture of NRPS PCP domains, PCP-containing didomain-fragments and of a full termination module (C-A-PCP-TE).

Publication types

  • Research Support, N.I.H., Extramural
  • Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't
  • Review

MeSH terms

  • Nuclear Magnetic Resonance, Biomolecular
  • Peptide Synthases / metabolism*
  • Peptides* / chemistry
  • Peptides* / metabolism
  • Peptides* / pharmacology
  • Protein Conformation

Substances

  • Peptides
  • Peptide Synthases
  • non-ribosomal peptide synthase