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Home › Publications › Fluorometric Analysis of Carrier-Protein-Dependent Biosynthesis through a Conformationally Sensitive Solvatochromic Pantetheinamide Probe

Fluorometric Analysis of Carrier-Protein-Dependent Biosynthesis through a Conformationally Sensitive Solvatochromic Pantetheinamide Probe

Published in:

ACS Chemical Biology 19(7) , 1416-1425 ( 2024)

Author(s):

Miyada, Matthew G., Choi, Yuran, Stepanauskas, Ramunas, Woyke, Tanja, La Clair, James J., Burkart, Michael D.

DOI:

10.1021/acschembio.4c00169

Abstract:

Carrier proteins (CPs) play a fundamental role in the biosynthesis of fatty acids, polyketides, and non-ribosomal peptides, encompassing many medicinally and pharmacologically relevant compounds. Current approaches to analyze novel carrier-protein-dependent synthetic pathways are hampered by a lack of activity-based assays for natural product biosynthesis. To fill this gap, we turned to 3-methoxychromones, highly solvatochromic fluorescent molecules whose emission intensity and wavelength are heavily dependent on their immediate molecular environment. We have developed a solvatochromic carrier-protein-targeting probe which is able to selectively fluoresce when bound to a target carrier protein. Additionally, the probe displays distinct responses upon CP binding in carrier-protein-dependent synthases. This discerning approach demonstrates the design of solvatochromic fluorophores with the ability to identify biosynthetically active CP-enzyme interactions.

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