Daptomycin, a lipopeptide comprising an N-decanoyl fatty acyl chain and a peptide core, is used clinically as an antimicrobial agent. The start condensation domain (dptC1) is an enzyme that catalyzes the lipoinitiation step of the daptomycin synthesis. In this study, we integrated enzymology, protein engineering, and computer simulation to study the substrate selectivity of the start condensation domain (dptC1) and to screen mutants with improved activity for decanoyl loading. Through molecular docking and computer simulation, the fatty acyl substrate channel and the protein-protein interaction interface of dptC1 are analyzed. Key residues at the protein-protein interface between dptC1 and the acyl carrier were mutated, and a single-point mutant showed more than three-folds improved catalytic efficiency of the target n-decanoyl substrate in comparing with the wild type. Moreover, molecular dynamics simulations suggested that mutants with increased catalytic activity may correlated with a more "open" and contracted substrate binding channel. Our work provides a new perspective for the elucidation of lipopeptide natural products biosynthesis, and also provides new resources to enrich its diversity and optimize the production of important components.
Keywords: condensation domain; fatty acyl selectivity; lipopeptide biosynthesis; nonribosomal peptide synthetase biosynthesis; protein engineering.
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