Litcius/Paper detail

Bacterial-Like Nonribosomal Peptide Synthetases Produce Cyclopeptides in the Zygomycetous Fungus Mortierella alpina

Jacob M. Wurlitzer, Aleksa Stanišić, Ina Wasmuth, Sandra Jungmann, Dagmar Fischer, Hajo Kries, Markus Gressler

2020Applied and Environmental Microbiology49 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Fungal natural compounds are industrially produced, with application in antibiotic treatment, cancer medications, and crop plant protection. Traditionally, higher fungi have been intensively investigated concerning their metabolic potential, but reidentification of already known compounds is frequently observed. Hence, alternative strategies to acquire novel bioactive molecules are required. We present the genus Mortierella as representative of the early-diverging fungi as an underestimated resource of natural products. Mortierella alpina produces two families of cyclopeptides, designated malpicyclins and malpibaldins, respectively, via two pentamodular nonribosomal peptide synthetases (NRPSs). These enzymes are much more closely related to bacterial than to other fungal NRPSs, suggesting a bacterial origin of these NRPS genes in Mortierella . Both enzymes were biochemically characterized and are involved in as-yet-unknown biosynthetic pathways of natural products in basal fungi. Hence, this report establishes early-diverging fungi as prolific natural compound producers and sheds light on the origin of their biosynthetic capacity.

Topics & Concepts

Nonribosomal peptideBiologyFungusEnzymeBiochemistryBiosynthesisBotanyMicrobial Natural Products and BiosynthesisFungal Biology and ApplicationsBiochemical and Structural Characterization