Biosynthesis of peptidic thiooxazole metallophores installed by multinuclear nonheme iron enzymes
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Significant effort has been directed toward characterization of nonheme iron enzymes owing to their breadth of unique reactivity. Through genome mining, we identified a conserved biosynthetic gene cluster within Pseudomonadota encoding one such family, the multinuclear nonheme iron-dependent oxidative enzymes (MNIO, formerly DUF692). Using a representative gene cluster from Fontimonas thermophila , we heterologously produced the post-translationally modified peptide fontiphorin, and detailed spectral analysis revealed MNIO-catalyzed installation of seven 5-thiooxazole (5TO) moieties. During our work, additional MNIO products were reported with conflicting structural assignments, so we investigated the related biosynthetic gene clusters from Haemophilus influenzae and Neisseria gonorrhoeae . Using alkylation-assisted HMBC correlations, we demonstrated that these products also contain 5TO resulting in a revision of the structure of oxazolin. We further provide evidence supporting a role for 5TO-containing peptides in copper detoxification and recommended this emerging class of C u- a ssociated p eptidic thio o xazole metallophores be referred to as captophorins. To further explore the captophorins, we reconstituted fontiphorin biosynthesis in vitro and investigated its enzymatic requirements. Using cell-free production of single-site, double-site, and naturally occurring variants, we examined enzyme-substrate interactions to determine key sites governing catalysis by 5TO-forming MNIOs. Through our detailed spectroscopic approach for 5TO assignment and investigation of enzyme-substrate interactions, our work unifies tens of thousands of MNIOs in the biosynthesis of captophorins.