Harnessing the biosynthetic potential of bacteria to produce ribosomally synthesised natural products

Lead Research Organisation: John Innes Centre
Department Name: Molecular Microbiology

Abstract

Bacteria make an incredible number of chemical compounds that are invaluable for a variety of medical and agricultural purposes, including antibiotics, antifungals, anticancer compounds and insecticides. In fact, the majority of clinically used antibiotics come from soil-dwelling bacteria. This ability to produce these biologically active natural products stems from the evolutionary advantage the molecules provide to the producer. For example, bacteria have evolved the ability to produce powerful antibiotics to kill competing neighbouring microbes. The recent crisis in the rise of multi-drug resistant bacterial infections means that there is a pressing need to discover new antibiotics. We believe that there are many novel antibiotics that remain to be discovered from bacteria, but existing discovery methods are missing many hidden molecules that we call "metabolic dark matter".

These natural products are produced by the action of a series of enzymes (proteins), which are encoded by genes (DNA) in the bacterial genome. Hundreds of thousands of bacterial genomes have now been sequenced. Researchers have developed methods to predict what compounds a bacterium should be able to make based on this genomic data ("genome mining"). This has revealed that many bacteria appear to be capable of producing many more compounds than have been identified. These cryptic compounds may be potent medicines or have other important biological functions. This makes the identification of these pathways and the associated compounds an important research goal.

However, we hypothesise that many important pathways are missed by existing genome mining methods. In this project, we will use a combination of computational, genetic and chemical methods to identify these molecules, understand how they are made and analyse them for biological activity towards clinically and agriculturally important pathogens.

We will focus on discovering new members of a class of natural product called ribosomally synthesised and post-translationally modified peptides (RiPPs). These are made across nature, from bacteria to monkeys, using the same biological machinery that makes large proteins. However, RiPP pathways have evolved to make much smaller natural products that have potent bioactivity. RiPPs include thiostrepton, which is used as an antibiotic to treat bacterial infections in veterinary medicine, nisin, a peptide with broad spectrum antibacterial activity that is used in food processing to suppress bacterial growth, and ziconotide, which is derived from a cone snail RiPP and is used to treat chronic pain in humans.

Technical Summary

Ribosomally synthesised and post-translationally modified peptides (RiPPs) are a natural product class that have key ecological roles and significant clinical promise. Multiple RiPPs and their derivatives are used (or are in trials) in medicine, such as thiostrepton, nosiheptide, ziconotide, MOR107 and LFF571. RiPPs originate from a larger ribosomally synthesised precursor peptide that consists of an N-terminal "leader" sequence and a core peptide. The core peptide is post-translationally modified by tailoring enzymes and is then hydrolysed from the leader peptide to yield the mature RiPP.

Despite a requirement to be assembled from proteinogenic amino acids, there is huge structural diversity across the RiPP class. However, there are fundamental challenges associated with the computational identification of RiPP gene clusters, as RiPP biosynthetic pathways lack universally shared features. This contrasts to other natural product classes, whose pathways feature conserved enzymatic motifs that are used in their bioinformatic identification. Therefore, many RiPP gene clusters remain unknown. Recent genomics-led findings of completely new RiPP families with antibacterial, anticancer and antiviral activity highlights how decades of screening efforts have overlooked these important natural products.

To address the challenges associated with RiPP discovery, we developed RiPPER, which represents a new way to identify RiPP gene clusters. In this proposal, we will build on this research to develop tools and resources for the identification of new RiPP gene clusters. This will lead to RiPPER2, a tool that will be made freely available to the natural products community, therefore providing an informatic framework for the discovery of novel RiPPs. We will use microbial genetics, chemistry and biochemistry to characterise new RiPP families (discovered by RiPPER in preliminary work) that we predict will possess antibacterial activity.

Publications

10 25 50
 
Description Using synthetic biology to make anticancer peptides
Amount £16,997 (GBP)
Organisation Norwich BioScience Institutes 
Sector Public
Country United Kingdom
Start 09/2022 
End 03/2023
 
Description Calabria thioviridamides 
Organisation University of Calabria
Country Italy 
Sector Academic/University 
PI Contribution We established a project to discovery new thioviridamide-like molecules (TLMs) by the use of a genome mining method. This involved pathway identification, strain fermentation, pathway cloning and mutagenesis, and then purification and chemical analysis of the products of these pathways.
Collaborator Contribution The group of Anna Rita Cappello determined the biological activity of our purified compounds against bacteria, fungi and human cell lines.
Impact Publication: https://pubs.acs.org/doi/10.1021/acschembio.7b00677 This collaboration is multi-disciplinary. We carry out microbiology, genetics and chemistry and the partners carry out cell biology assays.
Start Year 2016
 
Description Earlham Institute Biofoundry 
Organisation Earlham Institute
Country United Kingdom 
Sector Academic/University 
PI Contribution Development of an assay for strains that inhibit the growth of the plant pathogen Streptomyces scabies
Collaborator Contribution Technical insight and method development relating to the use of a robotic system for the high-throughput screening of Streptomyces inhibition.
Impact Paper: Moffat, A. D., Elliston, A., Patron, N. J., Truman, A. W. & Carrasco Lopez, J. A. A biofoundry workflow for the identification of genetic determinants of microbial growth inhibition. Synth Biol, 6, ysab004 (2021).
Start Year 2018
 
Description RiPP biosynthesis 
Organisation University of Glasgow
Country United Kingdom 
Sector Academic/University 
PI Contribution This is a collaboration with the research group of Jesko Koehnke at the University of Glasgow (previously Helmholtz Institute for Pharmaceutical Research Saarland, Germany). We have carried out genetic and bioinformatic analyses of biosynthetic pathways to ribosomally synthesized and post-translationally modified peptides (RiPPs), with a focus on the biosynthesis of bottromycin.
Collaborator Contribution The Koehnke group have characterised multiple biosynthetic enzymes using a combination of biochemistry and structural biology. They have also led the writing of multiple papers from the resulting work.
Impact Papers published: Sikandar, A. et al. The bottromycin epimerase BotH defines a group of atypical a/ß-hydrolase-fold enzymes. Nature Chemical Biology 16, 1013-1018 (2020). Franz, L., Kazmaier, U., Truman, A. W. & Koehnke, J. Bottromycins - biosynthesis, synthesis and activity. Nat. Prod. Rep. (2021). doi:10.1039/d0np00097c Franz, L., Adam, S., Santos-Aberturas, J., Truman, A. W. & Koehnke, J. Macroamidine Formation in Bottromycins Is Catalyzed by a Divergent YcaO Enzyme. J. Am. Chem. Soc. 139, 18158-18161 (2017). Grant: BBSRC responsive mode, BB/V016024/1, Harnessing the biosynthetic potential of bacteria to produce ribosomally synthesised natural products, 2021-2024 Multidisciplinary: chemistry, biochemistry, microbiology, structural biology, bioinformatics
Start Year 2017
 
Description John Innes/Rudjer Boškovic Summer School in Applied Molecular Microbiology 
Form Of Engagement Activity Participation in an activity, workshop or similar
Part Of Official Scheme? No
Geographic Reach International
Primary Audience Postgraduate students
Results and Impact I was a co-director of the John Innes/Rudjer Boškovic Summer School in Applied Molecular Microbiology. This is a longstanding workshop targetted at early-career researchers in the field of natural product biosynthesis. 45 students/post-docs are selected from a global application list, who then attend an 8-day course in Dubrovnik (10th and 17th September 2022). The attendees came from 21 different countries. Following the summer school, multiple faculty have been contacted by attendees for advice on projects and collaborations.
Year(s) Of Engagement Activity 2022
URL https://www.jic.ac.uk/training-careers/summer-schools/applied-molecular-microbiology/2022-applied-mo...
 
Description SAW Trust activity at a School (Thetford) 
Form Of Engagement Activity Participation in an activity, workshop or similar
Part Of Official Scheme? No
Geographic Reach Local
Primary Audience Schools
Results and Impact A one-day outreach activity organised by Edward Hems (Wilkinson group, JIC) with the SAW Trust, which combines Science, Art and Writing. The day focussed on bacteria and the molecules they make. Two members of the research group participated, where they ran an activity based around "Beautiful Bacteria" - looking at the colours, smells and shapes of bacteria.
Year(s) Of Engagement Activity 2023