Return to search

Using Saccharomyces cerevisiae for the Biosynthesis of Tetracycline Antibiotics

Developing treatments for antibiotic resistant bacterial infections is among the most urgent public health challenges worldwide. Tetracyclines are one of the most important classes of antibiotics, but like other antibiotics classes, have fallen prey to antibiotic resistance. Key small changes in the tetracycline structure can lead to major and distinct pharmaceutically essential improvements. Thus, the development of new synthetic capabilities has repeatedly been the enabling tool for powerful new tetracyclines that combatted tetracycline-resistance. Traditionally, tetracycline antibiotics were accessed through bacterial natural products or semisynthetic analogs derived from these products or their intermediates. More recently, total synthesis provided an additional route as well. Importantly however, key promising antibiotic candidates remained inaccessible through existing synthetic approaches.

Heterologous biosynthesis is tackling the production of medicinally important and structurally intriguing natural products and their unnatural analogs in tractable hosts such as Saccharomyces cerevisiae. Recently, the heterologous biosynthesis of several tetracyclines was achieved in Streptomyces lividans through the expression of their respective biosynthetic pathways. In addition, the heterologous biosynthesis of fungal anhydrotetracyclines was shown in S. cerevisiae. This dissertation describes the use of Saccharomyces cerevisiae towards the biosynthesis of target tetracyclines that have promising prospects as antibiotics based on the established structure-activity relationship of tetracyclines but have been previously synthetically inaccessible.

Chapter 1 provides an introduction to the pursuit of tetracycline antibiotics using S. cerevisiae. Following an overview of tetracycline drugs, the chapter describes the methods for making tetracyclines and their limitations in accessing the tetracycline analogs targeted in this study. The desirability of making these target analogs as well as key desired properties are then exemplified by natural products, totally synthetic and semisynthetic derivatives. The target tetracycline analogs pursued in this study are then outlined and the considerations in choosing their desired properties are discussed, as well as the reasons for employing S. cerevisiae in their synthesis.

Chapter 2 describes the use of Saccharomyces cerevisiae for the final steps of tetracycline biosynthesis, setting the stage for total biosynthesis of tetracyclines in Saccharomyces cerevisiae. Chapter 3 describes the work towards biosynthesis of the target tetracycline analogs using Saccharomyces cerevisiae, utilizing successful expression optimization and gene biomining approaches. Chapter 4 describes the work towards the target tetracycline analogs from fungal anhydrotetracyclines in Saccharomyces cerevisiae.

The challenge of enzyme evolution towards unnatural substrates and the complex environment of cells require metabolic engineering efforts to be performed in libraries, as it is currently impossible to predetermine which modifications will prove beneficial. Traditional methods in DNA mutagenesis and increasingly, advances in DNA synthesis, DNA assembly and genome engineering are enabling high throughput strain construction. Thus, there is a need for a general, high-throughput, versatile and readily implemented assay for the detection of target molecule biosynthesis. The development of such an assay is described in Chapter 5. The assay is demonstrated to detect tetracycline derivatives, and differentiate a producer and a nonproducer strain of the fungal anhydrotetracycline TAN-1612. The yeast three hybrid assay for metabolic engineering of tetracycline derivatives described in this chapter could be used in the next steps towards the heterologous biosynthesis of the target tetracycline analogs in S. cerevisiae and beyond.

Identiferoai:union.ndltd.org:columbia.edu/oai:academiccommons.columbia.edu:10.7916/d8-ek2d-sm38
Date January 2019
CreatorsHerbst, Ehud
Source SetsColumbia University
LanguageEnglish
Detected LanguageEnglish
TypeTheses

Page generated in 0.0056 seconds