AI Article Synopsis

  • The lab successfully synthesized the peptide antibiotic clovibactin on a larger scale, allowing for better study of its amino acid components.
  • Key amino acids (Phe, d-Leu, Ser, Leu) were found to be crucial for the antibiotic's effectiveness, while modifications to the d-Hyn residue showed they could be adjusted with slight activity loss.
  • Structural analysis through X-ray crystallography indicated that the macrolactone ring of clovibactin is vital for its antibiotic function, adopting a shape that can bind anions.

Article Abstract

Our laboratory reported the chemical synthesis and stereochemical assignment of the recently discovered peptide antibiotic clovibactin. The current paper reports an improved, gram-scale synthesis of the amino acid building block Fmoc-(2,3)-3-hydroxyasparagine-OH that enables structure-activity relationship studies of clovibactin. An alanine scan reveals that residues Phe, d-Leu, Ser, Leu, and Leu are important for antibiotic activity. The side-chain amide group of the rare d-Hyn residue is not essential to activity and can be replaced with a methyl group with a moderate loss of activity. An acyclic clovibactin analogue reveals that the macrolactone ring is essential to antibiotic activity. The enantiomer of clovibactin is active, albeit somewhat less so than clovibactin. A conformationally constrained clovibactin analogue retains moderate antibiotic activity, while a backbone -methylated analogue is almost completely inactive. X-ray crystallography of these two analogues reveals that the macrolactone ring adopts a crown-like conformation that binds anions.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC11382152PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/acs.joc.4c01414DOI Listing

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