Lanthipeptides
belong to the family of ribosomally synthesized
and post-translationally modified peptides (RiPPs). The (methyl)lanthionine
cross-links characteristic to lanthipeptides are essential for their
stability and bioactivities. In most bacteria, lanthipeptides are
maturated from single precursor peptides encoded in the corresponding
biosynthetic gene clusters. However, cyanobacteria engage in combinatorial
biosynthesis and encode as many as 80 substrate peptides with highly
diverse sequences that are modified by a single lanthionine synthetase
into lanthipeptides of different lengths and ring patterns. It is
puzzling how a single enzyme could exert control over the cyclization
processes of such a wide range of substrates. Here, we used a library
of ProcA3.3 precursor peptide variants and show that it is not the
enzyme ProcM but rather its substrate sequences that determine the
regioselectivity of lanthionine formation. We also demonstrate the
utility of trapped ion mobility spectrometry–tandem mass spectrometry
(TIMS-MS/MS) as a fast and convenient method to efficiently separate
lanthipeptide constitutional isomers, particularly in cases where
the isomers cannot be resolved by conventional liquid chromatography.
Our data allowed identification of factors that are important for
the cyclization outcome, but also showed that there are no easily
identifiable predictive rules for all sequences. Our findings provide
a platform for future deep learning approaches to allow such prediction
of ring patterns of products of combinatorial biosynthesis.
In the present work, four, well-studied, model peptides (e.g., substance P, bradykinin, angiotensin I and AT-Hook 3) were used to correlate structural information provided by ion mobility and ECD/CID fragmentation...
Lasso peptides are members of the
natural product superfamily of
ribosomally synthesized and post-translationally modified peptides
(RiPPs). Here, we describe the first lasso peptide originating from
a biosynthetic gene cluster belonging to a unique lasso peptide subclade
defined by the presence of a bifunctional protein harboring both a
leader peptidase (B2) and an ABC transporter (D) domain. Bioinformatic
analysis revealed that these clusters also encode homologues of the
NisR/NisK regulatory system and the NisF/NisE/NisG immunity factors,
which are usually associated with the clusters of antimicrobial class
I lanthipeptides, such as nisin, another distinct RiPP subfamily.
The cluster enabling the heterologous production of the lasso peptide
cochonodin I in E. coli originated from Streptococcus
suis LSS65, and the threaded structure of cochonodin I was
evidenced through extensive MS/MS analysis and stability assays. It
was shown that the ABC transporter domain from SsuB2/D is not essential
for lasso peptide maturation. By extensive genome mining dedicated
exclusively to other lasso peptide biosynthetic gene clusters featuring
bifunctional B2/D proteins, it was furthermore revealed that many
bacteria associated with human or animal microbiota hold the biosynthetic
potential to produce cochonodin-like lasso peptides, implying that
these natural products might play roles in human and animal health.
There is a growing demand for lower-cost, benchtop analytical
instruments
with complementary separation capabilities for the screening and characterization
of biological samples. In this study, we report on the custom integration
of trapped ion mobility spectrometry and ultraviolet photodissociation
capabilities in a commercial Paul quadrupolar ion trap multistage
mass spectrometer (TIMS-QIT-MSn UVPD platform). A gated
TIMS operation allowed for the accumulation of ion mobility separated
ion in the QIT, followed by a mass analysis (MS1 scan) or m/z isolation, followed by selected collision
induced dissociation (CID) or ultraviolet photodissociation (UVPD)
and a mass analysis (MS2 scan). The analytical potential of this platform
for the analysis of complex and labile biological samples is illustrated
for the case of positional isomers with varying PTM location of the
histone H4 tryptic peptide 4-17 singly and doubly acetylated and the
histone H3.1 tail (1-50) singly trimethylated. For all cases, a baseline
ion mobility precursor molecular ion preseparation was obtained. The
tandem CID and UVPD MS2 allowed for effective sequence confirmation
as well as the identification of reporter fragment ions associated
with the PTM location; a higher sequence coverage was obtained using
UVPD when compared to CID. Different from previous IMS-MS implementation,
the novel TIMS-QIT-MSn UVPD platform offers a lower-cost
alternative for the structural characterization of biological molecules
that can be widely disseminated in clinical laboratories.
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