Polyketides are a class of natural products isolated from microbes, plants and invertebrates which includes an impressive number of clinically effective drugs with diverse activities. To name a few examples: erythromycin (antibiotic), rapamycin (immunosuppressive), amphotericin (antifungal), avermectin (antiparasitic), and doxorubicin (anticancer). As other natural products do, polyketides may play disparate roles in the producing organisms, from defensive weapons (inhibiting growth of competitors, or acting against predators) to signaling molecules (working as messengers between social organisms). In Mycobacterium tuberculosis, some polyketides are key intermediates in the synthesis of complex lipids. These lipids are important components of the unusually thick cell envelope, and help the microbe to be a successful pathogen. Therefore, the study of polyketide synthesis in this bacterium may lead to the design of specific inhibitors as new anti-mycobacterial drugs.Citation (open access):
Chopra T, Banerjee S, Gupta S, Yadav G, Anand S, Surolia A, Roy RP, Mohanty D, Gokhale RS (2008). Novel intermolecular iterative mechanism for biosynthesis of mycoketide catalyzed by a bimodular polyketide synthase. PLoS Biology 6(7), e163. DOI: 10.1371/journal.pbio.0060163
Image: model of the PKS12 protein, modified from Figure 5 of the cited article.
Related links:
- Cracking the Polyketide Code. PLoS Biology (2004) 2(2): e35.
- Polyketide Biosynthesis: The Erythromycin Example (video of an excellent talk by Chaitan Khosla, May 2007). iBioSeminars, American Society for Cell Biology. The first part of the talk (Polyketides and Polyketide Biosynthesis) is also available at Google Video, and is embedded below.
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