Bactobolin

Bactobolin

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Bactobolin
Category Antibiotics
Catalog number BBF-00257
CAS 72615-20-4
Molecular Weight 383.22
Molecular Formula C14H20Cl2N2O6

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Description

Bactobolin is produced by the strain of Pseudomonas yoshitomensis. It has the activity of anti-gram-positive bacteria and negative bacteria, and can be used to inhibit experimental tumor.

Specification

Synonyms (-)-Bactobolin; Antibiotic BN 183B; Propanamide, 2-amino-N-(3-(dichloromethyl)-3,4,4a,5,6,7-hexahydro-5,6,8-trihydroxy-3-methyl-1-oxo-1H-2-benzopyran-4-yl)-, (3S-(3alpha,4alpha(R*),4abeta,5beta,6alpha))-
IUPAC Name (2S)-N-[(3S,4R,4aR,5R,6R)-3-(dichloromethyl)-5,6,8-trihydroxy-3-methyl-1-oxo-4a,5,6,7-tetrahydro-4H-isochromen-4-yl]-2-aminopropanamide
Canonical SMILES CC(C(=O)NC1C2C(C(CC(=C2C(=O)OC1(C)C(Cl)Cl)O)O)O)N
InChI InChI=1S/C14H20Cl2N2O6/c1-4(17)11(22)18-10-8-7(5(19)3-6(20)9(8)21)12(23)24-14(10,2)13(15)16/h4,6,8-10,13,19-21H,3,17H2,1-2H3,(H,18,22)/t4-,6+,8-,9-,10+,14-/m0/s1
InChI Key RBCHRRIVFAIGFI-RGBMRXMBSA-N

Properties

Antibiotic Activity Spectrum gram-positive bacterial; gram-negative bacteria; neoplastics (Tumor)
Melting Point 196-197 °C

Reference Reading

1. Stereocontrolled Synthesis of (-)-Bactobolin A
Petra Vojáčková, Lucyna Michalska, Marek Nečas, Dimitri Shcherbakov, Erik C Böttger, Jiří Šponer, Judit E Šponer, Jakub Švenda J Am Chem Soc. 2020 Apr 22;142(16):7306-7311. doi: 10.1021/jacs.0c01554. Epub 2020 Apr 14.
A stereoselective synthesis of the ribosome-binding antitumor antibiotic (-)-bactobolin A is reported. The presented approach makes effective use of (-)-quinic acid as a chiral pool starting material and substrate stereocontrol to establish the five contiguous stereocenters of (-)-bactobolin A. The key steps of the synthesis include a stereoselective vinylogous aldol reaction to introduce the unusual dichloromethyl substituent, a completely diastereoselective rhodium(II)-catalyzed C-H amination reaction to set the configuration of the axial amine, and an intramolecular alkoxycarbonylation to build the bicyclic lactone framework. The developed synthetic route was used to prepare 90 mg of (-)-bactobolin A trifluoroacetate in 10% overall yield.
2. The Chemistry and Biology of Bactobolin: A 10-Year Collaboration with Natural Product Chemist Extraordinaire Jon Clardy
E Peter Greenberg, Josephine R Chandler, Mohammad R Seyedsayamdost J Nat Prod. 2020 Mar 27;83(3):738-743. doi: 10.1021/acs.jnatprod.9b01237. Epub 2020 Feb 27.
Bactobolin is a hybrid natural product with potent cytotoxic activity. Its production from Burkholderia thailandensis was reported as part of a collaboration between the Greenberg and Clardy laboratories in 2010. The collaboration sparked a series of studies leading to the discovery of new analogues and associated structure-activity relationships, the identification of the bactobolin biosynthetic gene cluster and assembly of its unusual amino acid building block, the molecular target of and resistance to the antibiotic, and finally an X-ray crystal structure of the ribosome-bactobolin complex. Herein, we review the collaborations that led to our current understanding of the chemistry and biology of bactobolin.
3. Efflux Pumps in Chromobacterium Species Increase Antibiotic Resistance and Promote Survival in a Coculture Competition Model
Saida Benomar, Kara C Evans, Robert L Unckless, Josephine R Chandler Appl Environ Microbiol. 2019 Sep 17;85(19):e00908-19. doi: 10.1128/AEM.00908-19. Print 2019 Oct 1.
Members of the Chromobacterium genus include opportunistic but often-fatal pathogens and soil saprophytes with highly versatile metabolic capabilities. In previous studies of Chromobacterium subtsugae (formerly C. violaceum) strain CV017, we identified a resistance nodulation division (RND)-family efflux pump (CdeAB-OprM) that confers resistance to several antibiotics, including the bactobolin antibiotic produced by the soil saprophyte Burkholderia thailandensis Here, we show the cdeAB-oprM genes increase C. subtsugae survival in a laboratory competition model with B. thailandensis We also demonstrate that adding sublethal bactobolin concentrations to the coculture increases C. subtsugae survival, but this effect is not through CdeAB-OprM. Instead, the increased survival requires a second, previously unreported pump we call CseAB-OprN. We show that in cells exposed to sublethal bactobolin concentrations, the cseAB-oprN genes are transcriptionally induced, and this corresponds to an increase in bactobolin resistance. Induction of this pump is highly specific and sensitive to bactobolin, while CdeAB-OprM appears to have a broader range of antibiotic recognition. We examine the distribution of cseAB-oprN and cdeAB-oprM gene clusters in members of the Chromobacterium genus and find the cseAB-oprN genes are limited to the nonpathogenic C. subtsugae strains, whereas the cdeAB-oprM genes are more widely distributed among members of the Chromobacterium genus. Our results provide new information on the antibiotic resistance mechanisms of Chromobacterium species and highlight the importance of efflux pumps for saprophytic bacteria existing in multispecies communities.IMPORTANCE Antibiotic efflux pumps are best known for increasing antibiotic resistance of pathogens; however, the role of these pumps in saprophytes is much less well defined. This study describes two predicted efflux pump gene clusters in the Chromobacterium genus, which is comprised of both nonpathogenic saprophytes and species that cause highly fatal human infections. One of the predicted efflux pump clusters is present in every member of the Chromobacterium genus and increases resistance to a broad range of antibiotics. The other gene cluster has more narrow antibiotic specificity and is found only in Chromobacterium subtsugae, a subset of entirely nonpathogenic species. We demonstrate the role of both pumps in increasing antibiotic resistance and demonstrate the importance of efflux-dependent resistance induction for C. subtsugae survival in a dual-species competition model. These results have implications for managing antibiotic-resistant Chromobacterium infections and for understanding the evolution of efflux pumps outside the host.

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