Browsing by Subject "natural product"
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Item Natural Product Biosynthesis: Friend or Foe? From Anti-tumor Agent to Disease Causation(2012-02-14) Foulke-Abel, JenniferBiosynthetic natural products are invaluable resources that have been gleaned from the environment for generations, and they play an essential role in drug development. Natural product biosynthesis also possesses the latent ability to affect biological systems adversely. This work implements recent advances in genomic, proteomic and microbiological technologies to understand further biosynthetic molecules that may influence progression of human disease. Azinomycin A and B are antitumor metabolites isolated from the terrestrial bacterium Streptomyces sahachiroi. The azinomycins possess an unusual aziridine [1,2-a] pyrrolidine ring that reacts in concert with an epoxide moiety to produce DNA interstrand cross-links. Genomic sequencing of S. sahachiroi revealed a putative azinomycin resistance protein (AziR). Overexpression of AziR in heterologous hosts demonstrated the protein increases cell viability and decreases DNA damage response in the presence of azinomycin. Fluorescence titration indicated AziR functions as an azinomycin binding protein. An understanding of azinomycin resistance is important for future engineering and drug delivery strategies. Additionally, the S. sahachiroi draft genome obtained via 454 pyrosequencing and Illumina sequencing revealed several silent secondary metabolic pathways that may provide new natural products with biomedical application. ?-lactoglobulin (BLG), the most abundant whey protein in bovine milk, has been observed to promote the self-condensation of retinal and similar ?,?-unsaturated aldehydes. BLG is a possible non-genetic instigator of cycloretinal and A2E accumulation in the macula, a condition associated with age-related macular degeneration. BLG-mediated terpenal condensation has been optimized for in vitro study with the retinal mimic citral. In rabbits fed retinal and BLG or skim milk, cycloretinal formation was detected in the blood by 1H-NMR, and SDS-PAGE analysis indicated BLG was present in blood serum, suggesting the protein survives ingestion and retains catalytic activity. Mass spectrometry and site-directed mutagenesis provided mechanistic insight toward this unusual moonlighting behavior. The experiments described in this dissertation serve to further natural product biosynthesis discovery and elucidation as they relate to consequences for human health. Efforts to solve azinomycin biosynthesis via enzymatic reconstitution, characterize compounds produced by orphan gene clusters within S. sahachiroi, and obtain a clear mechanism for BLG-promoted cycloterpenal formation are immediate goals within the respective projects.Item Probing the Biosynthesis and Mode of Action of Azinomycin B(2010-10-12) Kelly, Gilbert ThomsonSince the isolation of azinomycins A and B in 1954 from the soil bacterium, Streptomyces sahachiroi, these natural products have been synthetic targets. Both compounds exhibit in vitro cytotoxic activity at submicromolar levels and demonstrate anti-tumor activities comparable to that of mitomycin C in vivo. Unique to this class of natural products is the presence of an aziridine [1,2-a] pyrrolidine ring system. Coupled with an epoxide moiety, these structural functionalities impart the ability to form interstrand cross-links with DNA via the electrophilic C10 and C21 carbons of azinomycin and the N7 positions of suitably disposed purine bases. This dissertation investigates the global impact of azinomycin B treatment in a yeast model with special emphasis on DNA damage response, the resulting cell cycle effects, and cellular localization of the compound. The results provide the first demonstration of the in vivo actions of azinomycin B and are consistent with the proposed role of the drug as a DNA crosslinking agent. Biosynthesis of azinomycin B was investigated and appears to have polyketide, non-ribosomal peptide synthetase and alkaloid origins. In pursuit of elucidating the biosynthetic origin we developed both a cell culturing system and a cell-free extract procedure capable of supporting azinomycin synthesis; we used these. These were employed with labeled metabolites to probe the biosynthetic origins of the molecule. Investigations with this enzyme preparation imparted important information regarding the substrate and cofactor requirements of the pathway. These results supported the premise of a mixed origin for the biosynthesis of the molecule and paved the way for expansive stable isotope labeling studies, which largely revealed the biosynthetic precursors and probable construction of the azinomycins. Some of these studies corroborate while other results conflict with initial proposed biosynthetic routes based upon the azinomycin biosynthetic gene cluster sequence. Future azinomycin biosynthetic gene cluster enzyme characterization, mechanistic investigations, and genetic modifications will ultimately provide definitive proof for the intermediacy of proposed biosynthetic precursors and the involvement of specific cofactors. Better understanding of how nature constructs unique molecule may provide insight into eventual chemoenzymatic/gene thearapy based approaches toward cancer therapy.