WO2018081590A1 - Compositions and methods for the production of compounds - Google Patents

Compositions and methods for the production of compounds Download PDF

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Publication number
WO2018081590A1
WO2018081590A1 PCT/US2017/058800 US2017058800W WO2018081590A1 WO 2018081590 A1 WO2018081590 A1 WO 2018081590A1 US 2017058800 W US2017058800 W US 2017058800W WO 2018081590 A1 WO2018081590 A1 WO 2018081590A1
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Prior art keywords
polyketide synthase
polyketide
seq
nucleic acid
modules
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PCT/US2017/058800
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English (en)
French (fr)
Inventor
Daniel C. GRAY
Enhu LI
Brian R. BOWMAN
Gregory L. Verdine
Keith Robison
Marc CHEVRETTE
Dan UDWARY
Pam Shouping WANG
Anna LI
Jay P. Morgenstern
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Warp Drive Bio LLC
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Warp Drive Bio LLC
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Priority to CN201780081161.XA priority Critical patent/CN110418642A/zh
Priority to AU2017350898A priority patent/AU2017350898A1/en
Priority to CA3042246A priority patent/CA3042246A1/en
Priority to EP17863519.9A priority patent/EP3532055A4/en
Priority to US16/345,595 priority patent/US20190264184A1/en
Priority to KR1020197015344A priority patent/KR102561694B1/ko
Priority to JP2019523693A priority patent/JP2019533470A/ja
Publication of WO2018081590A1 publication Critical patent/WO2018081590A1/en
Anticipated expiration legal-status Critical
Ceased legal-status Critical Current

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Definitions

  • Polyketide natural products are produced biosynthetically by polyketide synthases (PKSs), e.g., type I polyketide synthases, in conjunction with other tailoring enzymes.
  • PKSs polyketide synthases
  • Polyketide synthases (PKSs) are a family of large, multi-domain proteins whose catalytic functions are organized into modules to produce polyketides.
  • the basic functional unit of polyketide synthase clusters is the module, which encodes a 2- carbon extender unit, e.g., derived from malonyl-CoA.
  • the modules generally present in a polyketide synthase include i) a loading module; ii) extending modules; and iii) releasing modules.
  • the minimal domain architecture required for polyketide chain extension and elongation includes the ketosynthase (KS), acyl-transferase (AT) and the ACP (acyl-carrier protein) domains, and the specific chemistry of each module is encoded by the AT domain and by the presence of the ⁇ -ketone processing domains: ketoreductase (KR), dehydratase (DH), and enoylreductase (ER) domains.
  • KR ketoreductase
  • DH dehydratase
  • ER enoylreductase
  • Combinatorial biosynthesis is a general strategy that has been employed to engineer polyketide synthase (PKS) gene clusters to produce novel drug candidates (Weissman and Leadlay, Nature Reviews Microbiology, 2005).
  • PKS polyketide synthase
  • these strategies have relied on engineering PKS domain deletions and/or domain swaps within a module or by swapping an entire module from another cluster to produce a chimeric cluster.
  • the problem with this approach is that protein engineering of the polyketide megasynthases via wholesale domain and/or module replacement, insertion, or deletion can perturb the "assembly line" architecture of the PKS, thus drastically reducing the amount of polyketide synthesized.
  • the present disclosure provides compositions and methods for use in combinatorial biosynthesis of polyketides without a significant loss of compound production by module swapping between polyketide synthase genes.
  • Bioinformatics approaches may be used to predict module interface compatibility and therefore, the likelihood that a heterologous module may be swapped into a PKS gene.
  • the resulting compatibility information may be used to engineer a polyketide synthase with an increased likelihood of functioning in assembly-line polyketide biosynthesis.
  • the disclosure provides an engineered polyketide synthase that includes one or more heterologous modules with altered enzymatic activity relative to a reference polyketide, wherein the engineered polyketide synthase is capable of producing a polyketide when expressed under conditions suitable to allow expression of a compound by the engineered polyketide synthase and wherein the one or more heterologous modules do not substantially inhibit polyketide translocation during polyketide biosynthesis.
  • the disclosure provides an engineered polyketide synthase including one or more heterologous modules with altered enzymatic activity relative to a reference polyketide, wherein the engineered polyketide synthase is capable of producing a polyketide when expressed under conditions suitable to allow expression of a compound by the engineered polyketide synthase and wherein the one or more heterologous modules include linking sequences which are compatible to the linking sequences of the modules adjacent thereto.
  • the disclosure provides an engineered polyketide synthase including one or more heterologous modules with altered enzymatic activity relative to a reference polyketide, wherein the engineered polyketide synthase is capable of producing a polyketide when expressed under conditions suitable to allow expression of a compound by the engineered polyketide synthase and wherein the polyketide expression level of the engineered polyketide synthase is at least 1 % (e.g., at least 1 %, at least 2%, at least 3%, at least 4%, at least 5%, at least 6%, at least 7%, at least 8%, at least 9%, at least 10%, at least 20%, at least 30%, at least 40%, at least 50%, at least 60%, at least 70%, at least 80%, at least 90%, at least 100%, at least 1 1 0%, at least 120%, at least 130%, at least 140%, at least 150%) of the polyketide expression level of the reference polyketide synthase.
  • the polyketide expression level of the engineered polyketide synthase is at least 1 -1 0% (e.g. at least 1 -10%, at least 1 1 -20%, at least 21 -30%, at least 31 -40%, at least 41 -50%, at least 51 -60%, at least 61 -70%, at least 71 -80%, at least 81 -90%, at least 91 -100%, at least 101 -1 10%, at least 1 1 1 1 1 -120%, at least 121 -130%, at least 131 -140%, at least 141 -150%).
  • the engineered polyketide synthase includes one or more heterologous modules with native linking sequences.
  • the engineered polyketide synthase may include one, two, three, or more heterologous modules.
  • the heterologous modules may be adjacent in the engineered polyketide synthase.
  • any of the modules may be separated by one or more native modules in the engineered polyketide synthase.
  • At least one of the one or more heterologous modules is an elongation module which modifies a ⁇ -carbonyl unit in the variable region of the polyketide.
  • At least one of the one or more heterologous modules includes a portion having at least 90% identity to any one of SEQ ID NO: 1 -174.
  • At least one of the one or more heterologous modules includes a portion having the sequence of any one of SEQ ID NO: 1 -174.
  • EPLAIVGMACRLPGGVS SPEDLWRLVESGTDAI TDFPTDRGWDTDTLFDPDPDTPGKTYTVHGGFLDDVAGFDAPFF GI
  • SPREAVAMDPQQRLVLES SWEAFERAGIQPDS IRGSDTGVFMGAYPDGYGI GADLAGFGVTAGAGSVLSGRVSYF FGLEGPAMTVDTACS S SLVALHQAAYALRQGECSLALVGGVTVMPSPRTF IEFSRQRGLAADGRSKAFADAADGTGF SEGVGVLLVERLSDAQAKGHNI LALVRS SAVNQDGASNGLTAPNGPSQQRVIQSALAGAGLTSADVDWEAHGTGTT LGDP IEAQAVLATYGQDRDRPVLLGSLKSNLGHTQAAAGVSGVIKMVMALQHNTVPATLHVDAPSRHVDWTAGAVRL ATENQPWPETNRPRRAGVS SFGVSGTNAHVI LEQAPAASPVEPVDTTDVWPLWSARS SGSLSDQA
  • EPLAIVGMACRLPGGVS SPEDLWRLVESGFDAI TGFPTDRGWDVDNLYDPDPDAPGKSTTLHGGFLDDVAGFDASFF GI SPREAVAMDPQQRLAMEVSWEAFERAGIEPGSVRGSDTGVFMGAYPGGYGI GAELGGFMLTGRAGSVLAGRVSYF FGLEGPAMTVDTACS S SLVALHQAAYALRQGECSLALVGGVTVMPTPVMFVEFSQQQNLADDGRCKAFADSADGTGW SEGVGVLLVERLSDAQARGHNI LAWRGSAVNQDGASNGLTAPNGPSQQRVIRSALTSAGLTTADVDWEAHGTGTT LGDP IEAQAVLATYGQDRDQPVLLGSLKSNLGHTQAAAGVSGVIKMVMALQNGWPRTLHVEEPSRHVDWTAGAVEL VTENQSWPETGRARRAAVS SFGFSGTNAHVI LESAPAQPVPPMDTPAPTVTTGWPLP I SAKSLPALADLEDQLRAY
  • EPLAIVGMACRLPGGVS SPEDLWRLVESGTDAI TGFPADRGWAEYSFQGGFLDDAADFDAAFFGI SPREALAMDPQQ RLVLETAWEAFERAGIEPGSLRGSDTGVFMGAYPGGYGI GADRAGFGATAGAGSVLSGRVSYFFGLEGPAVTVDTAC S S SLVALHQAGHALRLGECSLALVGGVTVMATPDTFVEFSRQGGLAADGRSKAFADSADGAGFAEGAGVLLVERLSD AQRHGHQVLALVRGSAVNQDGASNGLTAPNGPSQQRVIQAALDNAGLTAAEVDWEAHGTGTTLGDP IEAQAVIAAY GQGRGEPLLLGS IKSNVGHTQAAAGVSGVIKWMALRHGWPRTLHVDEPSRHVDWTAGAVRLATENQSWPETGRPR RAGVS SFGI SGTNAHVI LEGVPEEPAGHEEPAGLTPLL I SAKTPAALAEFEDRLRAYLTTEPSLPAVASTLARTRSL
  • EPLAIVGMACRLPGGVS SPEDLWRLVESGTDAI TGFPADRGWPDDSRQGGFLDDAADFDAAFFGI SPREALAMDPQQ RLVLEAAWEAFERAGIEPGSLRGSDTGVFMGAYPGGYGI GADQAGFGTTAGAGSVLSGRVSYLFGLEGPAVTVDTAC S S SLVALHQAGHALRLGECSLALVGGVTVMGTPD IFAEFSRQGGLASDGRCKPFADAADGTGWAEGVGVLLVERLSD AERHGHQVLAWRGSAVNQDGASNGLTAPNGPSQQRVIQSAL IQAGLAPHEVDWEAHGTGTTLGDP IEAQAVIAAY GQDRAQPLLLGS IKSNVGHTQAAAGVSGVIKMVMALRHGVVPRTLHVDEPSRHVDWSAGAVRLATESQPWPDTGHPR RAGVS SFGI SGTNAHVI LEGVPEEPADTGEPSGLVPLLLSAKTPAALTHLEDRLRAYLTTEPNLPAVAST
  • EPLAWGMACRLPGGI TSPEELWELVEDGGDAVGDFPTDRGWDVAALHAAAESATSRAGALMGAADFDAAFFGI
  • SAVTVDTACS S SLVALHQAGQALRAGECSLALVGGVTVMASPQSFVEFSRQGGVAPDGRCKAFADAADGTGFAEGAG VLWERLSDAERNGHTVLAWRGSAVNQDGASNGI SAPNGPAQQRVIRQALGSAGLAPADVDWEAHGTGTVLGDP I EAQAVLATYGQGREVPLLLGSLKSNI GHAQAAAGVAGVIKMVMAMRRGWPRTLHVDEPS SHVDWTTGAVELLTEAR PWPESDRPRRAGVSAFGVSGTNAHVI LEEVAES SVRSGGS SGLVPLPVSARTES SLAVQVERLGAYVRSGADLSAVA DGL
  • EPLAIVGMACRLPGGVS SPEDLWRLVESGTDAI SGFPTDRGWDVENLDSAGKSYRAEGGFLDAAAGFDASFFGI SPR EALAMDPQQRLVLEVSWEAFERAGIEPGSLRGSDTGVFMGAYPGGYGI GADLGGFGATAGATSVLSGRVSYFFGLEG PAFTVDTACS S SLVALHQAGYALRQGECSLALVGGVTVMATPQTFVEFSRQGGLASDGRCKAFADAADGTGWAEGVG VLLVERLSDAQAKGHQVLAWRS SAVNQDGASNGLTAPNGPSQQRVIQAALSNAGLTTAEVDWEAHGTGTTLGDP I EAQALLATYGQDRERPLLLGSVKSNLGHTQAAAGVSGVIKMVMALRHGLVPRTLHVDEPSRHVDWSTGAVELVTENQ PWPETGRPRRAGVS SFGI SGTNAHVI LESAPSAQWENTWESAPEWVPLWSARTQSALADYEDRLRAYLAGSPGV
  • EPLAIVGMACRLPGGVS SPEDLWRLVESGTDAI SGFPTDRGWDAESLYDADPDAPGKSYCVEGGFLDNAS SFDAGFF GI SPREALAMDPQQRLVLEVSWEAFERAGIEPGS IRGTDTGVFMGAYAGGYGAGADLGGFAATASATSVLSGRVSYF FGLEGPAI TVDTACS S SLVALHQAGYALRQGECSLALVGGATVMATPQSFVEFSRQRGLASDGRCKAFADAADGTGW AEGVGVLLVERLSDARRNGHQVLAWRS SAVNQDGASNGLTAPNGPSQQRVIQAALSNAGLAAHEVDWEAHGTGTT LGDP IEAQAVLATYGQDRERPLLLGSLKSNI GHTQAASGVSGVIKMVMALQHHTVPRTLHVNEPSRHVDWSAGAVEL VRENQSWPEGDRPRRAGVS SFGVSGTNAHI I LESAPAQSAEEVQPVEVPWASDVLPLWSAKTHSALTEAEDRLRA
  • EPLAIVGMACRLPGGVS SPEDLWRLVESGTDAI SGFPTDRGWDVEGLFDPDPDASGKSYCVRGGFLDSVGGFDASFF GI SPREALAMDPQQRLLLEVSWEAFERAGIEPGSVRGSDTGVFMGGFPGGYGAGADLEGFGATAGAASVLSGRVSYF FGLEGPAI TVDTACS S SLVALHQAGYALRQGECSLALVGGVTVMATPQSFVEFSRQRGLASDGRCKAFADAADGTGW AEGVGVLLVERLSDAQAKGHQVLGWRGSAVNQDGASNGLSAPNGPSQQRVIRAALSNAGLTTAEVDWEAHGTGTT LGDP IEAQAVLATYGQDREQPLLLGSLKSNI GHAQAAAGVSGVIKMVMALRHGLVPRTLHVDEPSRHVDWSAGAVEL VTENQSWPVTGRPRRAGVSAFGVSGTNAHVI LESAPAQASEEAQPWTPWTPWASELVPLWSAKTESALAEVEG RLRAYLAVS
  • EPLAIVGMACRLPGGVS SPEDLWRLVESGTDAVSGFPTDRGWDVEDLFGPAAGDSYRLRGGFLDAAGGFDASFFGI S PREALAMDPQQRLVLEVSWEAFERAGIEPGSVRGTDTGVFMGAYPGGYGI GADLGGFGTTAGAVSVLSGRVSYFFGL EGPAFTVDTACS S SLVALHQAGYALRQGECSLALVGGVTVMATPQTFAEFARQGGLAGDGRSKAFADSADGAGFSEG VGVLLVERLSDARRNGHQVLAWRGSAVNQDGASNGLTAPNGPSQQRVIQAALNNAGLTTAEVDWEAHGTGTTLGD P IEAQALLAAYGQDRERPLLLGSVKSNLGHTQAAAGVSGVIKMVMALRHGLVPRTLHVDEPSRHVDWSEGAVELVTE NQSWPDTGRPGRAGVS SFGI SGTNAHVI LESAPSAQTVENTWESAPEWVPLVMSARTQSALADYEGRLRAYLAGSP GVDL
  • EPLAIVGMACRLPGGVASPEDLWRLVESGTDAVSGFPTDRGWDVEDFDSAGKSYRAEGGFLDAAAGFDASFFGI SPR EALAMDPQQRLLLEVSWETFERAGIEPGSVRGTDTGVFMGAYPGGYGI GADLGGFGATAGATSVLSGRVSYFFGLEG PAFTVDTACS S SLVALHQAGYALRQGECSMALVGGATVMATPELFTEFSRQGGLASDGRCKAFADSADGTGWAEGVG VLLVERLSDAQAKGHQVLAWRS SAVNQDGASNGLTAPNGPSQQRVIQAALSNAGLAAYEVDWEAHGTGTTLGDP I EAQAVLATYGQDRERPLLLGSLKSNI GHTQAASGVSGVIKMVMALQRGLVPRTLHVDEPSRHVDWSAGAVELVRENQ SWPDTEGPRRAGVS SFGVSGTNAHVI LESAPAQPAEEAQPWTPWASELVPLWSAKSQSALTEAEGRLRAYLAAS PGVDTRAVG
  • EPLAIVGMACRLPGGVS SPEDLWRLVESGTDAVSGFPTDRGWDLEDLFDPDPEAAGKSYCVQGGFLDAAAGFDAGFF GI SPREALAMDPQQRLLLEVSWEAFERAGIEPGSVRGSDTGVF I GAFPVGYGVGFDREGYGATSGPSVLSGRVSYFF GLEGPAI TMDTACS S SLVALHLAAQALRNGECSMALAGGVTVMATPEVFTEFARQRGLASDGRCKAFADSADGAGFS EGAGLLLVERLSDARRNGHQVLAWRGSAVNQDGASNGLTAPNGPSQQRVIQAAL INAGLTTAEVDWEAHGTGTTL GDP IEAQAVLATYGQGRERPLLLGSLKSNI GHTQAASGVSGVIKMVMALQRGLVPRTLHVDEPSRHVDWSAGAVELV RENQSWPDSEGPRRAGVS SFGVSGTNAHVI LESAPAQPAEEAQPWTPWASELVPLWSAKTESALTEVEGRLRVY LAASPGV
  • EPLAIVGMACRLPGGVS SPEDLWRLVESGTDAVSGFPTDRGWDVGDLFGPAAGDSYRLRGGFLDAAGGFDASFFGI S PREALAMDPQQRLVLEVSWEAFERAGIEPGSVRGTDTGVFMGAYPGGYGI GADLGGFGATASATSVLSGRVSYFFGL EGPAI TVDTACS S SLVALHQAGYALRQGECSLALVGGVTVMATPQTFVEFARQGGLAGDGRSKAFADSADGAGFSEG VGVLLVERLSDAQAKGHQVLAMLRS SAVNQDGASNGLTAPNGPSQQRVIQAALSNAGLAPHEVDWEAHGTGTTLGD P IEAQALLATYGQDRERPLLLGSVKSNLGHTQAAAGVSGVIKMVMALRNGLVPRTLHVDEPSRHVDWSVGAVELVTE NQSWPDSGRPRRAGVS SFGI SGTNAHVI LESEPPAQWENTWEPAPEWVPLVMSARTQSALADYEDRLRAYLAGSP GVDL
  • EPLAIVGMACRLPGGI SSPEDLWQLVQSGGDAITDLPTDRGWDLTHLYDNDAPPVYRGGFLTDAGDFDAAFFGI SPR EALAMDPQQRILLETSWEAFERGGINPEAIRGSNTGVFIGGFSYGYGTGADLGGFGATSTQTSVLSGRLSYFYGFEG PAVTVDTACSSSLVALHQASSALRQGECSLALAGGVTVMATPAGFEEFARQGGLAADGRCKAFSDTADGTGWAEGVG VLLVERLSDAQRNGHTVLAWRGSAVNQDGASNGLSAPNGPSQQRVIRQALANARLTPADIDWEAHGTGTRLGDPI EAQAILATYGQDRDQPLLLGSLKSNIGHTQAAAGVAGI IKTVMAMRHGTAPRTLHADEPSRHVDWSAGAVELLSENR LWPETDRPRRAAVSSFGVSGTNAHVI IEQPPHTPAPEAERTTGLDWPWLLSARTPAGLRAQAEQVSSLNEDFANIG FSLATTRT
  • EPLAIVGMACRLPGGI SSPEDLWQLVQSGGDAITDLPTDRGWDLETPYRGGFLTDPAGFDAGFFGI SPREALAMDPQ QRVLLEASWEAFERAGIKPDSLRGSDTGVFVGGFSQGYGTGADLGGFGATSTQTSVLSGRLSYFYGFEGPAVTVDTA CSSSLVALHQASSALRQGECSLALAGGVTVMATPAGFEEFARQGGLAADGRCKAFADTADGTGWAEGVGVLLVERLS DAQRNGHTVLAWRGSAVNQDGASNGLSAPNGPSQQRVIRQALANARLTPADIDWEAHGTGTRLGDPIEAQAILAT YGQDRDQPLLLGSLKSNIGHTQAAAGVAGI IKTVMAMRHGTAPRTLHADEPSRHVDWSAGAVELLSENRLWPETDRP RRAAVSSFGVSGTNAHVILESAPAESAEGPAGMGSESMGSESGPWWLSAKSASALAGQEERLRAYLASGADVRAV AAGLARRSV
  • EPLAIVGMACRLPGGI SSPEDLWQLVQSGGDAITDLPTDRGWDLETPYRGGFLTDPAGFDAGFFGI SPREALAMDPQ QRVLLEASWEAFERAGIKPDSLRGSDTGVFVGGFSQGYGTGADLGGFGATSTQTSVLSGRLSYFYGFEGPAVTVDTA CSSSLVALHQASSALRQGECSLALAGGVTVMATPAGFEEFARQGGLAADGRCKAFADTADGTGWAEGVGVLLVERLS DAQRNGHTVLAWRGSAVNQDGASNGLSAPNGPSQQRVIRQALANARLTPADIDWEAHGTGTRLGDPIEAQAILAT YGQDRDQPLLLGSLKSNIGHTQAAAGVAGI IKTVMAMRHGTAPRTLHADEPSRHVDWSAGAVELLSENRLWPETDRP RRAAVSSFGVSGTNAHVILESAPAESAEGPAGMGSESMGSESGPWWLSAKSASALAGQEERLRAYLASGADVRAV AAGLARRSV
  • EPLAIVGMACRLPGGI SSPEDLWQLVQSGGDAI SDFPTDRGWDLTHLYDNDAPPVYRGGFLTDAGDFDAAFFGI SPR EALAMDPQQRLILETSWEVLERAGIEPGTLRGSETGVFVGGFTQGYGTGADLGGFGMTSGHSSVLSGRVSYFFGFEG PAVTVDTACSSSLVALHQASSALRQGECSLALVGGVTVMASPQGFTEFSRQGGLSPDGRCKAFADAADGTGWAEGVG VLLVERLSDAQRNGHTVLAWRGSAVNQDGASNGLSAPNGPSQQRVIRQALANARLTPADIDWEAHGTGTTLGDPI EAQAILATYGQDRDQPLLLGSLKSNIGHTQAAAGVAGVIKMVMAMRHGTAPRTLHIDEPSRHIDWTTGSVALSTENQ PWPETGHPRRAGVSAFGVSGTNAHWLEGVPVAGPPEEDVEPGWPLLI SAKSRPALMEQEQRLRTYLDGSQTDIRA VAATLAHARSVFEHR
  • EPLAIVGMACRLPGGI SSPEDLWQLVQSGGDAI TDLPTDRGWDLTHLYDNDAPPVYRGGFLTDAGDFDAAFFGI SPR EALAMDPQQRILLETSWEAFERGGINPEAIRGSNTGVFIGGFSYGYGTGADLGGFGATSTQTSVLSGRLSYFYGFEG PAVTVDTACSSSLVALHQASSALRQGECSLALAGGVTVMATPAGFEEFARQGGLAADGRCKAFADTADGTGWAEGVG VLLVERLSDAQRNGHTVLAWRGSAVNQDGASNGLSAPNGPSQQRVIRQALANARLTPADIDWEAHGTGTTLGDPI EAQAILATYGQDRDQPLLLGSLKSNIGHTQAAAGVAGI IKTVMAMRHGTAPRTLHADEPSRHVDWSAGAVELLSENR LWPETDRPRRAAVSSFGVSGTNAHVILESAPAESAEGPAGMGSESMGSESGPWWLSAKSASALAGQEERLRAYLA SGADVRAVA
  • EPLAIVGMACRLPGGVS SPEELWRLVESGVDAI SGFPVDRGWDVENLFDPDPDAAGKSYCVQGGFLDSAAEFDAAFF GI
  • SPREALAMDPQQRLVLETSWEAFERAGIEPGS IKGSDTGVFMGAYQGGYGSGADLGGFGATAGATSVLSGRVSYF FGFEGPAMTVDTACS S SLVALHQAGYALRQGECSLALVGGVTVMATPQSFVEFSRQRGLAVDGRSKAFADAADGTGW AEGVGVLLVERLSDAQAKGHQI LAWRGSAVNQDGASNGLSAPNGPSQQRVIRQALANASLTPADVDWEAHGTGTT LGDP IEAQAVIATYGQDRSTPLLLGSLKSNI GHTQAAAGVSGVIKMVMALRHGWPQTLHVDQPSRHVDWSAGAVEL LTSNQPWPS SERARRAGVSAFGVSGTNAHVI LESAPAEPWAEAGPVPWSDVLPLVLSAKSAPALRAL
  • EPLAIVGMACRLPGGVS SPEGLWRLWSGSDVI SGFPADRGWGVEGLRGGFLPGAADFDAGFFGI SPREALAMDPQQ RLVLEASWEVLERAGIAPGSLRGSDTGVFMGAYPGGYGI GADLGGFGATAGAVSVLSGRVSYFFGFEGPAMTVDTAC S S SLVALHQAGHALRNSECSLALVGGVTVMASPQTFVEFERQGGLAADGRSKAFSDGADGAGFSEGVGVLLVERLSD ARAKGHQI LALVRGSAVNQDGASNGLTAPNGPSQQRVIRQALANASLTVADVDWEAHGTGTTLGDP IEAQALLATY GQDRDRPLLLGSVKSNLGHTQAAAGVTGVIKMVMALRHGWPRTLHVDEPSRHVDWSAGAVELVTSNREWPVTDRPG RAGVS SFGI SGTNAHVI LEAVPWSAVSTGGEVQPLWSARTAPAAEDLTARLRTYLADTPDTDQRAAATTLALTRS VFE
  • EPLAIVGMACRLPGGVS SPEELWRLVESGVDAI SGFPVDRGWDVENLFDPDPDAAGKSYCVQGGFLDTAAEFDAAFF GI SPREALAMDPQQRLVLETSWEAFERAGIEPGSLKGSDTGVYMGAFSGGYAADLEGFGATAGATSVLSGRVSYFFG FEGPAMTVDTACS S SLVALHQAGYALRQGECSLALVGGVTVMASPQSFVEFSRQRGLAADGRSKAFADAADGTGWAE GVGVLLVERLSDAQAKGHQI LAWRGSAVNQDGASNGLSAPNGPSQQRVIRQALANASLTPAD I DWEAHGTGTTLG DP IEAQAVIATYGQDRSTPLLLGSLKSNI GHTQAAAGVSGVIKMVMALRHGWPQTLHVDQPSRHVDWSAGAVELVT SNQPWPS SERPRRAGVSAFGVSGTNAHVI LESAPAEPWAEVGLVPWSDVLPLVLSAKSAPALTVLEQ
  • EPLAIVGMACRLPGGVS SPEGLWRLWSGSDVI SGFPADRGWGVEGLRGGFLPGAADFDAGFFGI SPREALAMDPQQ RLVLEASWEVLERAGIAPGSLRGSDTGVFMGAYPGGYGI GADLGGFGATAGAVSVLSGRVSYFFGFEGPAMTVDTAC S S SLVALHQAGHALRNSECSLALVGGVTVMASPQTFVEFERQGGLAADGRSKAFSDGADGAGFSEGVGVLLVERLSD ARAKGHQI LALVRGSAVNQDGASNGLTAPNGPSQQRVIRQALANASLTVADVDWEAHGTGTTLGDP IEAQALLATY GQGRSVPLLLGSVKSNLGHTQAAAGVTGVIKMVMALRHGWPRTLHVDEPSRHVDWSAGAVELVTSNREWPWDRPG RAGVS SFGI SGTNAHVI LEGIPSNTPVSTAAGAVLPLWSARTAPAAEDLTARLRAYLSAAPETDQRAAAATLALTR
  • EPLAIVGMACRLPGGVS SPEELWRLVESGSDAI SGFPVDRGWDADGLFDPDPDAAGKSYCVQGGFLDTAAEFDAAFF GI
  • EPLAIVGMACRLPGGVASPEDLWRLVESGTDAI TGLPTDRGWDLGAVAAESYCVEGGFLDGVAGFDAAFFGI SPREA LAMDPQQRLLLETSWESLERAGIAPLSLRGSDTGVFMGAYPGGYGAGADLGGFGTTSGAASVLSGRI SYFFGLEGPA MTVDTACS S SLVALHLAGQALRNGECSLALVGGVTVMAAPD IFPEFARQRGLASDGRSKAFADSADGTGWSEGVGVL LVERLSDAQANGHQI LALVRGSAVNQDGASNGLTAPNGPSQQRVIRQALANASLTPADVDVDVIEAHGTGTTLGDP IEA QALLATYGQGRSVPLLLGSVKSNLGHTQAAAGVTGVIKMVMALRHGWPQTLHVDEPSRHVDWSAGAVELVTSNREW PVTDRPGRAGVS SFGI SGTNAHVI LEAVPSDTPAPTTTDAVLPLWSTRTAPAAEDLTARLRAYLSAAPETDQRA
  • EPLAIVGMACRLPGGI S SAEELWRLVAEGGDAI GPFPGDRGWDVDALYDPDPAAGHTYTRSGGFLPGATDFDAAFFG I SPREAQAMDPQHRQLLETSWEALEHAGI DPAGLRGRDVGVFAGFSGQDYIAEMGVGPAEAGGYQVTGRAASVLSGR LSYFYGLEGPAVTVDTACS S SLVALHLAGQSLRDGES SLALVGGVTVMS SPGLFVEFSRQRGLAPDGRCKAFSADAD GTGWSEGVGVLWERLSDARRNGHRI LAWRGSAVNQDGASNGLTAPNGPSQQRVIRQALAQSGLSVADVDWEAHG TGTALGDP IEAQAVLATYGGRAGGEPVRLGSLKSNI GHTQAAAGIASL IKMVQAIRYGVMPRTLHVSEPSPLVDWAS GRVELLTSD IPWPDGVRRAAVSAFGI SGTNAHVI LEEAPAPAAVPS IRPWSGPALPLVFSARDPSALAAQTR
  • EP IAIVAMACRAPGGVS SPEGLWRLVESGTDATSGFPTDRGWDVDNLFDPDPDAAGKTYSVRGGFLETAADFDAAFF GI SPREALGMDPQQRLLLETSWEAIERAQI DPKSLRGRDVGVYVGGAAQGYGI GATDQQQENL I TGS S I SLLSGRVS YALGLEGPGVTVDTACS S SLVALHLASQALRQRECSLALVSGVSVMATPDVFVEFSRQRGLAADGRCKSFSAAADGT TWSEGVGVLVLQRLSEAVREGHRVLAWRGSAVNSDGASNGLTAPNGVSQQRVIRQALAGAGLTASEVDWEAHGTG TKLGDP IEAEAI LATYGQDRDAPAWLGSLKSNI GHTMAASGVLGVIKMVQAMRHGLLPRTLHVDEPSPHVDWARGD I ALLTENQPWPDGTRPRRAGVS SFGLSGTNAHWLEEYPAPVAAAPPVTPARGGPLPWVLSAQSPN
  • EPLAIVGMACRLPGGVS SPEDLWRLVESGGDAI SDFPADRGWD IENLFDPDPDAAGKTYSVRGGFLDAAAGFDAAFF GI SPREALAMDPQQRLVLEASWEAFERAGIEPGSVRGSDTGVFMGAYPGGYGTGADVGGFGATAGAVSVLSGRVSYF FGLEGPAMTVDTACS S SLVALHQAGHALRQGECSLALVGGVTVMATPHTF IEFSRQQGLASDGRSKAFADAADGAGF SEGVGVLWERLSDARAKGHRVLAWRS SAVNQDGASNGLTAPNGPSQQRVIRQALANAGLTGADVDWEAHGTGTT LGDP IEAQAVLATYGQDRQKPLLLGSLKSNVGHTQAAAGVSGVIKMVMALQHGWPRTLHVDEPSRHVDWSAGAVEL VTENQPWPSVDRPRRAGVS SFGI SGTNAHVI LESVPVQLPVPSAGLAPLMI SAKTAPALGDAEARLRGYLT
  • EPLAIVGMACRLPGGI S SAEELWRLVAEGGDAI GPFPGDRGWD I DALYDPDPDAAGRTYTRSGGFLPGAGDFDAAFF GI SPREAQAMDPQHRQLLETSWEALEHAGI DPAGLRGRDVGVFAGFSGQDYIAEMGVGPAEAGGYQVTGRAASVLSG RLSYFYGFEGPAVTVDTACS S SLVALHLAGQSLRDGES SLALVGGVTVMS SPGLFVEFSRQRGLAPDGRCKAFSVDA DGTGWSEGVGVLWERLSDARRNNHQI LAWRGSAVNQDGASNGLTAPNGPSQQRVIRQALAQSGLSVGDVDWEAH GTGTALGDP IEAQAVLATYGSRTGGEPVRLGSLKSNI GHTQAAAGIASL IKMVQS IRYGVMPRTLHVSEPSPLVDWA AGRVELLTSDVPWPEGVRRAAVSAFGI SGTNAHVI LEEAPAPAEAVPS IRPWSGPELPLVFSARD
  • EPLAIVGMACRLPGGVS SPEDLWRLVESGTDATSGFPVDRGWADS SMRGGFLDAAADFDAAFFGI SPREALAMDPQQ RLVLEASWEAFERAGIEPGSVRGSD I GVFMGAYPGGYGI GADLAGFGATAGAGSVLSGRVSYFFGLEGPAVTVDTAC S S SLVALHQAGHALRLGECSLALVGGVTVMATPDTFVEFARQGGLASDGRSKAFADSADGAGFSEGVGVLLVERLSD AQRHGHRVLAWRGSAVNQDGASNGLTAPNGPSQQRVIQAALAHAGLAPHEVDWEAHGTGTTLGDP IEAQAVIATY GQDRDEPLLLGSVKSNVGHTQAAAGVAGVIKMVMALRHGWPQTLHVDEPSRHVDWTAGAVRLLTEKQPWPSTDRPR RAGVS SFGI SGTNAHVI LEGVAEEPAQSEDS SELVPLVI SAKTPAALTQVEERLRAYLTAESNLSAVASTLA
  • EPLAIVGMACRLPGGVS SPEDLWRLVESGTDATSGFPTDRGWADS SMRGGFLVAAADFDAAFFG I SPREALAMDPQQ RLVLEASWEAFERAGIEPGTVRGSDTGVFMGAYPGGYGI GADLAGFGATAGAGSVLSGRVSYFFGLEGPAVTVDTAC S S SLVALHQAGHALRQGECSLALVGGVTVMATPDLFVEFARQGGLASDGRCKAFGDTADGTGWAEGVGVLLVERLSD AQAKGHRVLAWRGSAVNQDGASNGLTAPNGPSQQRVIQAALHNARLTPADVDWEAHGTGTTLGDP IEAQAVIAAY GQGRDEPLLLGSLKSNVGHTQAAAGVSGVIKMVMALQHGWPRTLHVDEPS SHVDWTAGAVRLVTENQSWPDTGRPR RAAVSAFGVSGTNAHVI LES SAAPSPT IPQPPSAEPMPLVI SAKTPAALADYEGRLRAYLTAPGVDVPAVAATLAVT RSLFE
  • EPLAIVGMACRLPGGVS SPEDLWRLVESGTDAI SDFPTDRGWADAAGAPYSPQGGFVDAAADFDAAFFGI SPREALA MDPQQRLVLEASWEAFERAGIEPGTVRGSDTGVFMGAYPGGYGI GADQAGFGTTAGAGSVLSGRVSYFFGLEGPAVT VDTACS S SLVALHQAGHALRQGECSLALVGGVTVMGTPD IFAEFSRQGGLASDGRCKAFGDDADGTGWGEGVGI LLV ERLSDAQRHSHRVLAWRGSAVNQDGASNGLTAPNGPSQQRVIQAALAHAGLAPHEVDWEAHGTGTTLGDP IEAQA VIATYGQDRDEPLLLGSVKSNVGHTQAAAGVAGVIKMVMALRHGWPRTLHADQPSRHVDWTAGAVRLATENQPWPA I DRPRRAGVS SFGI SGTNAHVI LEGVAEEPAQSEES SPLMPLVI SAKTPAALTRLEERLRAYLAAKPETSLG
  • EPLAIVGMACRLPGGVS SPEDLWRLVESGTDAI SRFPDDRGWDVEGLFDPDPDAPGKSYSVEGGFLDAVADFDAAFF GI
  • EPLAWGMACRLPGGVS SPEDLWRLVESGTDAI SGFPADRGWDAESLFDPDPAVGKSYCVEGGFLDSAASFDAGFFG I SPREALAMDPQQRL IMEVSWEAFERAGIEPGSVRGSDTGVFMGAYAGGYGAGADLGGFAATASATSVLSGRVSYFF GLEGPAI TVDTACS S SLVALHQAGYALRQGECSLALVGGVTVMATPQSFVEFSRQRGLASDGRCKAFADSADGTGWA EGVGVLLVERLSDAQAKGHQVLAWRS SAVNQDGASNGLTAPNGPSQQRVIQAALSNAGLAAHEVDWEAHGTGTTL GDP IEAQAL IATYGQDRERPLLLGSLKSNI GHAQAASGVSGVIKMVMALQHNTVPRTLHVDEPSRHVDWAAGAVELV RENQPWPGTDRPRRAGVS SFGVSGTNAHVI LESAPPAQPAEEAQPVETPWASDVLPLVI SAKTQPALTEHEDRLRA
  • the disclosure provides a chimeric polyketide synthase, wherein at least one module of the chimeric polyketide synthase has been modified as compared to a polyketide synthase having the sequence of SEQ ID NO: 175-176.
  • SEQ ID NO: 175 amino acid sequence of SEQ ID NO: 175
  • the disclosure provides a chimeric polyketide synthase where at least one module includes a portion having at least 90% identity to any one of SEQ ID NO: 1 -174.
  • the disclosure provides a nucleic acid encoding any one of the above described polyketide synthases.
  • the nucleic acid encoding any one of the above described polyketide synthases further encodes an LAL in which the sequence encoding the LAL is operatively linked to the sequence encoding the polyketide synthase.
  • the LAL may be a heterologous LAL.
  • the LAL may include a portion having at least 80% (e.g., at least 80%, at least 85%, at least 90%, at least 95%, at least 99%) sequence identity to SEQ ID NO: 177. In some embodiments, the LAL may include a portion having the sequence of SEQ ID NO: 177. In some embodiments, the disclosure provides a nucleic in which the LAL has the sequence of SEQ ID NO: 177. In some embodiments, the LAL lacks a TTA inhibitory codon in an open reading frame.
  • the nucleic acid includes an LAL binding site, in which the sequence encoding the LAL binding site is operatively linked to the sequence encoding the polyketide synthase.
  • the LAL binding site includes a portion having at least 80% (e.g., at least 80%, at least 85%, at least 90%, at least 95%, at least 99%) sequence identity to the sequence of SEQ ID NO: 1 78 (CTAGGGGGTTGC). In some embodiments, the LAL binding site includes a portion having the sequence of SEQ ID NO: 178 (CTAGGGGGTTGC). In some embodiments, the LAL binding site has of the sequence of SEQ ID NO: 178 (CTAGGGGGTTGC). In some embodiments of the above described aspect, the LAL binding site has the sequence of SEQ ID NO: 1 79 (GGGGGT).
  • the binding of an LAL to the LAL binding site promotes expression of the polyketide synthase.
  • nucleic acid encoding any one of the above described polyketide synthases further encodes a nonribosomal peptide synthase.
  • nucleic acid encoding any one of the above described polyketide synthases further encodes a P450 enzyme.
  • the nucleic acid encoding any one of the above described polyketides and a first P450 enzyme further encodes a second P450 enzyme.
  • the disclosure provides an expression vector including any of the foregoing nucleic acids.
  • the expression vector may be an artificial chromosome, e.g., a bacterial artificial chromosome.
  • the disclosure provides a host cell including any of the above described expression vectors.
  • the disclosure provides a host cell including any of the foregoing polyketide synthases, in which the polyketide synthase is heterologous to the host cell.
  • the host cell naturally lacks an LAL and/or an LAL binding site.
  • the host cell includes an LAL capable of binding to an LAL binding site and regulating expression of a polyketide synthase.
  • the LAL and/or LAL binding site may be heterologous to the cell.
  • the host cell includes an LAL with a portion having at least 80% (e.g., at least 80%, at least 85%, at least 90%, at least 95%, at least 99%) sequence identity to the sequence of SEQ ID NO: 177.
  • the host cell is a bacterium, e.g., an actinobacterium, such as an actinobacterium selected from the group consisting of Streptomyces ambofaciens, Streptomyces hygroscopicus, or Streptomyces malayensis.
  • an actinobacterium such as an actinobacterium selected from the group consisting of Streptomyces ambofaciens, Streptomyces hygroscopicus, or Streptomyces malayensis.
  • the actinobacterium is S1391 , S1496, or S2441 .
  • the host cell has been modified to enhance expression of a polyketide synthase.
  • the host cell has been modified to enhance expression of a compound-producing protein by (i) deletion of an endogenous gene cluster which expresses a compound-producing protein; (ii) insertion of a heterologous gene cluster which expresses a compound-producing protein; (iii) exposure of the host cell to an antibiotic challenge; and/or (iv) introduction of a heterologous promoter that results in an at least 2-fold increase in expression of a compound compared to the homologous promoter.
  • the disclosure provides a method of producing a polyketide by culturing any of the foregoing host cells under suitable conditions.
  • the disclosure provides a method of producing a polyketide by culturing a host cell engineered to express any of the foregoing polyketide synthases under conditions suitable for the polyketide synthase to produce a polyketide.
  • the disclosure provides a method of producing a compound, the method including: (a) providing a parent polyketide synthase sequence capable of producing a compound; (b) determining the compatibility of at least one module of a second polyketide synthase with at least two modules of the parent polyketide synthase; (c) producing a nucleic acid encoding a modified polyketide synthase, wherein the modified polyketide synthase includes at least one module of a second polyketide synthase which has been determined to be compatible with the at least two modules of the parent polyketide synthase.
  • the disclosure provides a method of producing a compound, the method including: (a) providing a parent nucleic acid encoding a parent polyketide synthase; (b) modifying the parent nucleic acid to create a modified nucleic acid encoding a modified polyketide synthase capable of producing a compound, wherein the modification produces a modified polyketide synthase including at least one heterologous module.
  • the disclosure provides a method of producing a compound, the method including: (a) providing a parent polynucleotide sequence capable of producing a compound; (b) identifying one or more heterologous modules suitable for replacement of one or more modules in the parent polynucleotide sequence; (c) producing a nucleic acid encoding a modified polyketide synthase, wherein the modified polyketide synthase includes at least one heterologous module identified in step (b).
  • the disclosure provides a method of producing a plurality of engineered polyketide synthases, wherein each of the plurality of polynucleotides corresponds to an engineered polyketide synthase, and wherein each of the plurality of polynucleotides includes one or more heterologous modules with altered enzymatic activity relative to a reference polyketide.
  • the method includes the steps of: (a) providing a parent polynucleotide sequence encoding a polyketide synthase; (b) identifying one or more modules for replacement in the parent polynucleotide sequence; (c) identifying two or more heterologous modules suitable for replacement for each of the modules identified in step (b); (d) generating a plurality of polynucleotides, wherein each of the plurality of polynucleotides corresponds to an engineered polyketide synthase, and wherein each of the plurality of polynucleotides includes a heterologous module selected from the two or more heterologous modules identified in step (c) in replacement of each of the one or more modules to be replaced identified in step (b)..
  • a “polyketide synthase” refers to an enzyme belonging to the family of multi-domain enzymes capable of producing a polyketide.
  • a polyketide synthase may be expressed naturally in bacteria, fungi, plants, or animals.
  • the term "engineered polyketide synthase” is used to describe a non-natural polyketide synthase whose design and/or production involves action of the hand of man.
  • an "engineered” polyketide synthase is prepared by production of a non-natural polynucleotide which encodes the polyketide synthase.
  • a cell that is "engineered to contain” and/or “engineered to express” refers to a cell that has been modified to contain and/or express a protein that does not naturally occur in the cell.
  • a cell may be engineered to contain a protein, e.g., by introducing a nucleic acid encoding the protein by introduction of a vector including the nucleic acid.
  • gene cluster that produces a small molecule or “gene cluster that produces a compound,” as used herein, refers to a cluster of genes which encodes one or more compound-producing proteins.
  • heterologous refers to a relationship between two or more proteins, nucleic acids, compounds, and/or cell that is not present in nature.
  • the LAL having the sequence of SEQ ID NO: 177 is naturally occurring in the S18 Streptomyces strain and is thus homologous to that strain and would thus be heterologous to the S12 Streptomyces strain.
  • homologous or “native,” as used interchangeably herein, refer to a relationship between two or more proteins, nucleic acids, compounds, and/or cells that is present naturally.
  • LAL having the sequence of SEQ ID NO: 177 is naturally occurring in the S1 8 Streptomyces strain and is thus homologous to that strain.
  • recombinant refers to a protein that is produced using synthetic methods.
  • reference polyketide synthase refers to a polyketide synthase that has a sequence having at least 80% identity (e.g., at least 80% identity, at least 85% identity, at least 90% identity, at least 95% identity, at least 99% identity, or 100% identity) to the sequence of an engineered polyketide synthase except to the sequence of the one or more modules which are modified.
  • the term "compatibility” refers to a measure of the likelihood of two adjacent modules to form a competent module-module junction, in which polyketide translocation is not substantially inhibited.
  • a heterologous module may be considered compatible if it meets at least one of the following criteria: 1 ) the module is present in the same module clade as one or more adjacent modules of the reference PKS, as determined by the module-level phylogeny classification described in the detailed description of the invention; 2) the module is assigned a score of greater than or equal to 0.90 in the inter-module covariation analysis algorithm described in the detailed description of the invention; or 3) the module belongs to the same functional clade or sub-clade as one or more adjacent modules of the reference PKS, as determined by the evolutionary trace methodology outlined in the detailed description of the invention.
  • linking sequence refers to a sequence directly upstream or downstream of an inter-modular junction.
  • the ACP for the upstream homologous module, the ACP and KS-AT didomain of the inserted heterologous module, and the KS of the downstream homologous module may all be considered linking sequences.
  • module refers to a region of a polyketide synthase that includes multiple domains. Modules present in a polyketide synthase may include i) a loading module; ii) extending modules; and iii) releasing and/or cyclization modules, depending on whether the final polyketide is linear or cyclic.
  • the domains which may be included in a given module include, but are not limited to, acyltransferase (AT), acyl carrier protein (ACP), keto-synthase (KS), ketoreductase (KR), dehydratase (DH), enoylreductase (ER), methyltransferase (MT), sulfhydrolase (SH), and thioesterase (TE).
  • AT acyltransferase
  • ACP acyl carrier protein
  • KS keto-synthase
  • KR ketoreductase
  • DH dehydratase
  • ER enoylreductase
  • MT methyltransferase
  • SH sulfhydrolase
  • TE thioesterase
  • acceptor module refers to a homologous module within a PKS cluster subject to engineering by module swapping. In the resulting engineered PKS cluster, the acceptor module is absent.
  • donor module refers to a heterologous module that is introduced into an engineered PKS cluster.
  • module swapping refers to the exchange of one or more heterologous donor modules for one or more homologous acceptor modules.
  • the term "does not substantially inhibit polyketide translocation” refers to the ability of a heterologous PKS module to function in a biosynthetic assembly line.
  • a heterologous loading module does not substantially inhibit polyketide translocation if the loading module is able to load a starter unit onto its ACP domain and pass the starter unit to the KS domain of the adjacent (n+1 ) extender module.
  • a heterologous extender module does not substantially inhibit polyketide translocation if the extender module is able to receive a starter unit or polyketide chain from the previous (n-1 ) module, catalyze the addition of an extender unit, and pass the elongated polyketide chain to the adjacent (n+1 ) module.
  • a heterologous module does not substantially inhibit polyketide translocation if the engineered PKS that includes the heterologous module produces a compound in levels that are detectable by a highly sensitive detection method, e.g., LC-TOF mass spectrometry.
  • An extender unit e.g., a malonyl-CoA
  • An extender unit is loaded onto the acyl carrier protein domain of the current module catalyzed by another acyltransferase domain.
  • the polyketide chain is then elongated by subsequent extender modules after being passed from the acyl carrier protein domain of module n to the ketosynthase domain of the n+1 module.
  • the acyl carrier protein bound extender unit reacts with the polyketide chain bound to the ketosynthase domain with expulsion of CO2 to produce an extended polyketide chain bound to the acyl carrier protein.
  • Each added extender unit may then be modified by ⁇ - ketoprocessing domains, i.e., ketoreductase (which reduces the carbonyl of the elongation group to a hydroxy), dehydratase (which expels H2O to produce an alkene), and enoylreductase (which reduces alkenes to produce saturated hydrocarbons).
  • ketoreductase which reduces the carbonyl of the elongation group to a hydroxy
  • dehydratase which expels H2O to produce an alkene
  • enoylreductase which reduces alkenes to produce saturated hydrocarbons
  • FIGS. 1 A and 1 B are schematics illustrating the mechanisms by which PKS biosynthesis proceed.
  • FIG. 1 A depicts polyketide chain elongation and ⁇ -carbonyl processing within a module.
  • FIG. 1 B depicts translation between modules.
  • FIG. 2A is a diagram depicting complementary bioinformatics approaches to the prediction of functional protein-protein interactions at the module-module junction.
  • FIG. 2B is a phylogenetic tree resulting from multiple sequence alignments of complete FK-family modules.
  • FIG. 2C is a diagram that illustrates the upstream and downstream module-module junctions used to determine the compatibility of a given heterologous module.
  • FIG. 2D is a correlation map that depicts the alignment of the ACP domain of a given module and the KS-AT didomain of a second module.
  • FIG. 2E depicts the compatibility score resulting from inter- domain residue covariation analysis for a series of heterologous modules. Scores are normalized to the homologous module for the polyketide synthase in question, which is given a score of 1 .00.
  • FIGS. 2F and 2G depict how evolutionary trace analysis is used to predict module-module junction compatibility.
  • FIG. 2F is a phylogenetic tree generated by multiple sequence alignments of FK- family KS and ACP domains, in which group-specific residues have been concatenated into functional clades or sub-clades. The distance between modules can be used to predict module-module junction compatibility.
  • FIG. 2G is a schematic depicting the compatibility relationships predicted by evolutionary trace analysis between KS and ACP domains for the FK-family.
  • FIG. 3A is a schematic depicting a single module swap in which a donor module replaces either module 3 or module 4 of the PKS gene cluster that produces Compound 1 .
  • FIG. 3B is an image of the engineered PKS that includes the heterologous module 3 from the S17 Streptomyces strain in place of the homologous module 3 in the PKS that produces Compound 1 .
  • the engineered PKS module 3 now includes an ER domain, and thus, the resulting compound produced by the engineered PKS, Compound 2, is reduced relative to Compound 1 .
  • FIG. 3C is an image depicting compounds, e.g., Compound 2, Compound 3, Compound 4, and
  • FIG. 4A is a schematic depicting combinatorial swapping of a dimodule unit.
  • FIG. 4B is a schematic depicting the synthesis of dimodule units from exogenous donor modules by a first round of Gibson assembly.
  • the dimodule product is shown as analyzed by DNA gel electrophoresis.
  • FIG. 4C is a schematic depicting dimodule capture, amplification, and enrichment in a shuttle vector. Dimodule units resulting from a first round of Gibson assembly are captured in a shuttle vector by a second round of Gibson assembly. This allows for the dimodule assembly to be amplified, enriched, and ligated into the intended PKS.
  • FIG. 4D is a schematic depicting the construction of dimodule libraries by combinatorial synthesis.
  • FIG. 4E is an image depicting the possible resulting compounds that may be generated by an exemplary dimodule library swapped into module 3 and module 4 of the PKS that produces Compound 1 .
  • FIG. 4F depicts oversampling required for sufficient coverage of a large combinatorial dimodule library.
  • FIG. 4F is a graphical representation of the oversampling required to achieve 90% or greater coverage of a 225 member dimodule combinatorial library. 18% of the 650 sampled clones were found to have produced polyketide compounds resulting from the engineered PKS cluster, as determined by LC- TOF mass spectrometry analysis.
  • FIG. 4G is a schematic depicting a method of preparing combinatorial dimodule libraries and characterizing the resulting libraries using NanoPore sequencing.
  • FIG. 4H is a schematic depicting the core informatics workflow for deconvoluting the sequences of combinatorial dimodule libraries by NanoPore sequencing.
  • FIGS. 5A and 5B depict the construction of trimodule libraries by combinatorial synthesis.
  • FIG. 5A is a schematic illustrating a trimodule swap of modules 4, 5, and 6 of the PKS cluster that produces Compound 7, to produce a theoretical library size of 2,197 engineered polyketide synthases.
  • FIG. 5b is an image of high efficiency trimodule assembly by Gibson assembly as analyzed by DNA gel electrophoresis.
  • FIG. 6A is a schematic illustrating a module swap that results in ring expansion by exchanging a single module acceptor for a dimodule donor.
  • the resulting expanded ring compound produced by the engineered PKS, Compound 8, is also depicted.
  • FIG. 6B is a spectrogram that shows the production of an expanded ring compound, Compound 8, as analyzed by LC-TOF mass spectrometry.
  • FIG. 7A is schematic depicting the enzymatic domains of five PKS loading modules, including Rapamycin and novel PKS cluster, X23. Also shown is the starter unit associated with each loading module.
  • FIG. 7B depicts the compounds produced by engineered PKS clusters resulting from single module swaps in the X23 PKS cluster.
  • the products include Compound 1 1 and 12, which are produced by an engineered PKS that contains a heterologous loading module.
  • the present invention describes compositions and methods for the production of polyketide compounds by an engineered polyketide synthase that includes one or more heterologous modules.
  • the present invention also describes methods for predicting the compatibility of linking sequences of heterologous module-module junctions to produce an engineered polyketide synthase that does not substantially inhibit translocation during polyketide biosynthesis.
  • Compounds that may be produced with the methods of the invention include, but are not limited to, polyketides and polyketide macrolide antibiotics such as erythromycin ; hybrid polyketides/non- ribosomal peptides such as rapamycin and FK506; carbohydrates including aminoglycoside antibiotics such as gentamicin, kanamycin, neomycin, tobramycin ; benzofuranoids; benzopyranoids; flavonoids; glycopeptides including vancomycin; lipopeptides including daptomycin; tannins; lignans; polycyclic aromatic natural products, terpenoids, steroids, sterols, oxazolidinones including linezolid; amino acids, peptides and peptide antibiotics including polymyxins, non-ribosomal peptides, ⁇ -lactams antibiotics including carbapenems, cephalosporins, and penicillin ; purines, pteridines, polypyrroles,
  • PKSs Polyketide synthases
  • Type I polyketide synthases are large, modular proteins which include several domains organized into modules.
  • the modules generally present in a polyketide synthase include i) a loading module; ii) extending modules; and iii) releasing and/or cyclization modules depending on whether the final polyketide is linear or cyclic.
  • the domains which generally are found in the modules are acyltransferase (AT), acyl carrier protein (ACP), keto-synthase (KS), ketoreductase (KR), dehydratase (DH),
  • ER enoylreductase
  • MT methyltransferase
  • SH sulfhydrolase
  • TE thioesterase
  • a polyketide chain and the starter groups are generally bound to the thiol groups of the active site cysteines in the ketosynthase domain (the polyketide chain) and acyltransferase domain (the loading group and malonyl extender units) through a thioester linkage.
  • Binding to acyl carrier protein (ACP) is mediated by the thiol of the phosphopantetheinyl group, which is bound to a serine hydroxyl of ACP, to form a thioester linkage to the growing polyketide chain.
  • the growing polyketide chain is handed over from one thiol group to another by trans-acylations and is released after synthesis by hydrolysis or cyclization.
  • the synthesis of a polyketide begins by a starter unit, being loaded onto the acyl carrier protein domain of the PKS catalyzed by the acyltransferase in the loading module.
  • An extender unit e.g., a malonyl-CoA, is loaded onto the acyl carrier protein domain of the current module catalyzed by another acyltransferase domain.
  • the polyketide chain is then elongated by subsequent extender modules after being passed from the acyl carrier protein domain of module n to the ketosynthase domain of the n+1 module.
  • the acyl carrier protein bound extender unit reacts with the polyketide chain bound to the ketosynthase domain with expulsion of CO2 to produce an extended polyketide chain bound to the acyl carrier protein.
  • Each added extender unit may then be modified by ⁇ -ketoprocessing domains, i.e., ketoreductase (which reduces the carbonyl of the elongation group to a hydroxy), dehydratase (which expels H2O to produce an alkene), and enoylreductase (which reduces alkenes to produce saturated hydrocarbons).
  • a thioesterase domain in the releasing modules hydrolyzes the completed polyketide chain from the acyl carrier protein of the last extending module.
  • the compound released from the PKS may then be further modified by other proteins, e.g., nonribosomal peptide synthase.
  • the biosynthetic cluster harbors polyketide
  • PKS biosynthesis proceeds by two key mechanisms: polyketide chain elongation within a module and translocation between modules (FIGS. 1 A and 1 B).
  • the basic functional unit of polyketide synthase clusters is the extender module, which encodes a 2-carbon extender unit derived from malonyl-CoA.
  • the minimal domain architecture required for polyketide chain elongation includes the ketosynthase (KS), acyl-transferase (AT) and the ACP (acyl-carrier protein) domains, and the specific chemistry of each module is encoded by the AT domain and by the presence of the beta- carbonyl processing domains: ketoreductase (KR), dehydratase (DH), and enoylreductase (ER) domains.
  • KR ketoreductase
  • DH dehydratase
  • ER enoylreductase
  • ⁇ -ketone processing domains are the domains in a PKS which result in modification of the elongation groups added during the synthesis of a polyketide. Each ⁇ -ketone processing domain is capable of changing the oxidation state of an elongation group.
  • the ⁇ -ketone processing domains include ketoreductase (which reduces the carbonyl of the elongation group to a hydroxy), dehydratase (which expels H2O to produce an alkene), and enoylreductase (which reduces alkenes to produce saturated hydrocarbons).
  • the present disclosure provides methods and compositions related to engineered polyketide synthases produced by swapping modules between related PKS clusters.
  • Polyketide translocation is controlled by protein-protein interactions at the inter-modular junctions.
  • module swapping is guided by bioinformatic predictions to determine which modules have the highest probability of functioning in assembly-line polyketide biosynthesis.
  • Multiple bioinformatics methods are used to determine the structural information in PKS sequence alignments to predict protein-protein interactions that mediate polyketide translocation at the inter-modular junction.
  • the present disclosure includes a DNA assembly strategy to swap one or more heterologous donor modules for one or more acceptor modules to generate hybrid PKS clusters.
  • module swapping is achieved by single, di- or tri-, or multi-module capture. In some embodiments, module swapping may be performed by exchange of the loading module. In some embodiments, module swapping may be performed by exchange of one or more extender modules. In some embodiments, module swapping may be performed by exchange of one or more releasing or cyclization modules. In some embodiments, two or more heterologous donor modules may replace a single acceptor module which may result in the production of a ring-expanded compound. In some embodiments, a single heterologous donor module may replace two or more acceptor modules which may result in a contracted ring compound. In some embodiments, the engineered polyketide synthases may produce novel compounds.
  • the pooled capture and transfer of single, di- or tri-, or multi-module units enables the production of combinatorial libraries of engineered polyketide synthases.
  • a dimodule unit for example, consists of two heterologous modules, each of which may be independently selected from a pool of heterologous modules.
  • a trimodule unit example, consists of three heterologous modules, each of which may be independently selected from a pool of heterologous modules.
  • One or more modules of a polyketide synthase may be replaced with a single, di-, tri-, or multi-module unit, where the single, di-, trior multi-module unit is selected from a pool of single- di-, tri- or multi-module units produced by combinatorial synthesis.
  • Exemplary methods for the production of combinatorial libraries of engineered polyketide synthases e.g., dimodule and trimodule combinatorial libraries
  • single-molecule long-read sequencing technology may be used to characterize libraries of engineered polyketide synthases which are produced by any of the methods described herein.
  • single- molecule long-read sequencing e.g., Nanopore sequencing or SMRT sequencing
  • single-molecule long-read sequencing may be used to characterize (e.g., deconvolute) combinatorial libraries of engineered polyketide synthases (e.g., combinatorial libraries of engineered polyketides synthases which are produced by pooled capture and transfer of single, di- or tri-, or multi-module units).
  • Single-molecule long-read sequencing enables the identification of the module or modules which are incorporated into the combinatorial library.
  • the predicted enzymatic chemistry can therefore be connected to the compounds produced by the engineered polyketide synthases.
  • the resulting compounds may be identified by chemical methods of analysis known to one of skill in the art (e.g., mass spectrometry or high performance liquid
  • the predicted enzymatic chemistry can be connected to the function of the resulting compounds (e.g., binding to a target protein or inducing a phenotype, such as a cell based phenotype). Accordingly, long-read sequencing of a genetically encoded molecule may allow for genotypic-phenotypic linkage.
  • Single-molecule long-read sequencing technologies may be considered to include any sequencing technology which enables the sequencing of a single molecule of a biopolymer (e.g., a polynucleotide such as DNA or RNA), and which enables read lengths of greater than 2 kilobases (e.g., greater than 5 kilobases, greater than 10 kilobases, greater than 20 kilobases, greater than greater than 50 kilobases, or greater 1 00 kilobases).
  • Single-molecule long-read sequencing technologies may enable the sequencing of multiple single molecules of DNA or RNA in parallel.
  • Single-molecule long-read sequencing technologies may include sequencing technologies that rely on individual
  • Nanopore sequencing is an exemplary single-molecule long-read sequencing technology that may be used to characterize libraries of engineered polyketide synthases that are prepared by any of the methods described herein.
  • Nanopore sequencing enables the long-read sequencing of sinlge molecules of of biopolymers (e.g., polynucleotides such as DNA or RNA).
  • Nanopore sequencing relies on protein nanopores set in an electrically resistant polymer membrane. An ionic current is passed through the nanopores by setting a voltage across this membrane. If an analyte (e.g., a biopolymer such as DNA or RNA) passes through the pore or near its aperture, this event creates a characteristic disruption in current.
  • an analyte e.g., a biopolymer such as DNA or RNA
  • the magnitude of the electric current density across a nanopore surface depends on the composition of DNA or RNA (e.g., the specific base) that is occupying the nanopore. Therefore, measurement of the current makes it possible to identify the sequence of the molecule in question.
  • Exemplary methods for the use of Nanopore sequencing to characterize combinatorial libraries of engineered polyketide synthases are provided in Example 3.
  • SMRT Single molecule real-time sequencing
  • PacBio Single molecule real-time sequencing
  • SMRT is a parallelized single molecule DNA sequencing method.
  • SMRT utilizes a zero-mode waveguide (ZMW).
  • ZMW zero-mode waveguide
  • a single DNA polymerase enzyme is affixed at the bottom of a ZMW with a single molecule of DNA as a template.
  • the ZMW is a structure that creates an illuminated observation volume that is small enough to observe only a single nucleotide of DNA being incorporated by DNA polymerase.
  • Each of the four DNA bases is attached to one of four different fluorescent dyes.
  • the fluorescent tag When a nucleotide is incorporated by the DNA polymerase, the fluorescent tag is cleaved off and diffuses out of the observation area of the ZMW where its fluorescence is no longer observable.
  • a detector detects the fluorescent signal of the nucleotide incorporation, and the base call is made according to the corresponding fluorescence of the dye.
  • the present disclosure provides complementary bioinformatic approaches for the prediction of functional protein-protein interactions at the module-module junction (FIG. 2A).
  • these bioinformatic approaches serve as the predictive basis for the design of chimeric PKS proteins by module swapping.
  • Module-level phytogeny serve as the predictive basis for the design of chimeric PKS proteins by module swapping.
  • a module-level phylogenic map may be constructed by multiple sequence alignment of PKS modules.
  • a module-level phylogenic map was generated by multiple sequence alignments of complete FK-family modules (FIG. 2B). This enabled the identification of 10 module clades including 8 elongation, 1 loading, and 1 off-loading.
  • a heterologous module is compatible if it is present in the same module clade as the adjacent modules.
  • Inter-module residue covariation across the intermodular junction was computed to generate an algorithm to rank order intermodule compatibility (FIGS. 2C-2E).
  • Type I polyketide synthase protein sequences were extracted from Genbank and an internal database using Hidden Markov Models trained on the ketosynthase (KS) and acyl carrier protein (ACP) domains. Shorter peptide sequences, starting with the ACP of a module and extending through the KS and acyl transferase (AT) of the following module, were extracted to generate a multiple alignment. Positions not aligning to an amino acid from PDB entry 2JU1 (for the ACP) or 2HG4 (for KS and AT and associated linkers) were removed to compress the multiple alignment.
  • the following alignments are retrieved from the original multiple alignment: the ACP for the upstream domain, the ACP and KS-AT didomain for the inserted module, and the KS for the downstream module. These are used to synthesize two rows compatible with the original multiple alignment: one with the ACP of the upstream module and KS-AT of the inserted module and a second with the ACP of the inserted module and KS-AT of the downstream module.
  • the amino acids at position I and J in the synthesized alignment are retrieved (aal, aaJ). The mutual information for this amino acid pair within the alignment is multiplied by the coupling score to generate a raw score.
  • the raw scores are computed for each I, J pair in the saved coupling matrix and for each of the two synthesized alignments.
  • the sum of the raw scores for the heterologous donor domain is divided by the sum of the raw scores for the homologous native domain to generate a normalized percentage score.
  • Candidate swaps with the same chemistry are ranked by this score.
  • the process is expanded, e.g., if N donor domains are to be swapped in, then one synthetic alignment is generated for the preceding module's ACP domain and the first donor module's KS-AT didomain, another for the first donor modules' ACP domain and the second donor module's KS-AT didomain and so forth, concluding with the final donor domain's ACP and the first module of the recipient synthase downstream of the breakpoint.
  • Scores are computed and normalized in the same manner: the scores for the swapped modules are normalized for the score computed for the native modules.
  • a heterologous module is compatible if the module is assigned a score of greater than or equal to 0.90 in the inter-module covariation analysis algorithm described herein.
  • phylogenetic trees with uniform branch lengths were constructed based on multiple sequence alignments of FK-family KSs and ACPs. For every non-terminal node in a tree, a vertical cutoff was applied by which terminal nodes were partitioned into groups based on shared parental nodes at the cutoff. Residues globally conserved across all groups and residues locally conserved within groups, but specific to a given group, were identified as functional residues. Globally conserved residues suggest rules that likely must be observed for all members of the FK-family.
  • Group-specific residues suggest guidelines that may provide predictive power for engineering within the FK class. For each tree, the earliest cutoff at which the number of group-specific residues exceeded the number of globally conserved residues was selected for further analysis. Group-specific residues were concatenated into functional clades and unrooted phylogenetic trees of the clades were constructed. Distances between terminal nodes in the phylogenetic tree were used to create an evolutionary distance score (EDS). The KS and ACP EDSs between a homologous acceptor module and a proposed heterologous donor module were calculated and used to predict engineering compatibility.
  • EDS evolutionary distance score
  • KS and ACP clade classifications were then used to create network maps of neighboring KSs and ACPs weighted by the frequency a given KS-ACP or ACP-KS pair was observed in FK-family polyketides.
  • Superimposing a proposed module swap onto the network map was used to predict engineering compatibility with upstream ACPs and downstream KSs.
  • a heterologous module is compatible if the module belongs to the same functional evolutionary clade or sub-clade as one or more adjacent modules in the reference PKS.
  • LALs The Large ATP-binding regulators of the LuxR family of transcriptional activators (LALs) are known transcriptional regulators of polyketides such as FK506 or rapamycin.
  • the LAL family has been found to have an active role in the induction of expression of some types of natural product gene clusters, for example PikD for pikromycin production and RapH for rapamycin production. Binding of the LAL or multiple LALs in a complex to specific sites in the promoters of genes within a gene cluster that produces a small molecule (e.g., a polyketide synthase gene cluster) potentiates expression of the gene cluster and hence promotes production of the compound (e.g., a polyketide).
  • LALs may be used for the regulation of the expression of engineered PKS clusters.
  • LALs include three domains, a nucleotide-binding domain, an inducer-binding domain, and a DNA-binding domain.
  • a defining characteristic of the structural class of regulatory proteins that include the LALs is the presence of the AAA+ ATPase domain.
  • Nucleotide hydrolysis is coupled to large conformational changes in the proteins and/or multimerization, and nucleotide binding and hydrolysis represents a "molecular timer" that controls the activity of the LAL (e.g., the duration of the activity of the LAL).
  • the LAL is activated by binding of a small-molecule ligand to the inducer binding site. In most cases the allosteric inducer of the LAL is unknown.
  • the allosteric inducer is maltotriose.
  • Possible inducers for LAL proteins include small molecules found in the environment that trigger compound (e.g., polyketide) biosynthesis.
  • the regulation of the LAL controls production of compound-producing proteins (e.g., polyketide synthases) resulting in activation of compound (e.g., polyketide) production in the presence of external environmental stimuli.
  • the LAL is a fusion protein.
  • an LAL may be modified to include a non-LAL DNA-binding domain, thereby forming a fusion protein including an LAL nucleotide-binding domain and a non-LAL DNA-binding domain.
  • the non-LAL DNA-binding domain is capable of binding to a promoter including a protein-binding site positioned such that binding of the DNA-binding domain to the protein- binding site of the promoter promotes expression of a gene of interest (e.g., a gene encoding a compound-producing protein, as described herein).
  • the non-LAL DNA binding domain may include any DNA binding domain known in the art. In some instances, the non-LAL DNA binding domain is a transcription factor DNA binding domain.
  • non-LAL DNA binding domains include, without limitation, a basic helix-loop-helix (bHLH) domain, leucine zipper domain (e.g., a basic leucine zipper domain), GCC box domain, helix-turn-helix domain, homeodomain, srf-like domain, paired box domain, winged helix domain, zinc finger domain, HMG-box domain, Wor3 domain, OB-fold domain,
  • bHLH basic helix-loop-helix
  • leucine zipper domain e.g., a basic leucine zipper domain
  • GCC box domain e.g., a basic leucine zipper domain
  • helix-turn-helix domain e.g., a basic leucine zipper domain
  • homeodomain e.g., a basic leucine zipper domain
  • srf-like domain e.g., a basic leucine zipper domain
  • paired box domain e.g., paired box domain
  • the promoter is positioned upstream to the gene of interest, such that the fusion protein may bind to the promoter and induce or inhibit expression of the gene of interest.
  • the promoter is a heterologous promoter introduced to the nucleic acid (e.g., a chromosome, plasmid, fosmid, or any other nucleic acid construct known in the art) containing the gene of interest.
  • the promoter is a preexisting promoter positioned upstream to the gene of interest.
  • the protein-binding site within the promoter may, for example, be a non-LAL protein-binding site.
  • the protein- binding site binds to the non-LAL DNA binding domain, thereby forming a cognate DNA binding domain/ protein-binding site pair.
  • the LAL is encoded by a nucleic acid having at least 70% (e.g., at least 70%, at least 75%, at least 80%, at least 85%, at least 90%, at least 95%, at least 99%) sequence identity to any one of SEQ ID Nos: 180-212 or has a sequences with at least 70% (e.g., at least 70%, at least 75%, at least 80%, at least 85%, at least 90%, at least 95%, at least 99%) sequence identity to any one of SEQ ID Nos: 180-212.
  • a gene cluster (e.g., a PKS gene cluster) includes one or more promoters that include one or more LAL binding sites.
  • the LAL binding sites may include a polynucleotide consensus LAL binding site sequence (e.g., as described herein).
  • the LAL binding site includes a core AGGGGG (SEQ ID NO: 213) motif.
  • the LAL binding site includes a sequence having at least 80% (e.g., 80%, 85%, 90%, 95%, 97%, 98%, 99%, or 100%) homology to SEQ ID NO: 213.
  • the LAL binding site may include mutation sites that have been restored to match the sequence of a consensus or optimized LAL binding site.
  • the LAL binding site is a synthetic LAL binding site.
  • synthetic LAL binding sites may be identified by (a) providing a plurality of synthetic nucleic acids including at least eight nucleotides; (b) contacting one or more of the plurality of nucleotides including at least eight nucleotides with one or more LALs; (c) determining the binding affinity between a nucleic acid of step (a) and an LAL of step (b), wherein a synthetic nucleic acid is identified as a synthetic LAL binding site if the affinity between the synthetic nucleic acid and an LAL is greater than X.
  • the identified synthetic LAL binding sites may then be introduced into a host cell in a compound-producing cluster (e.g., a PKS cluster).
  • a pair of LAL binding site and a heterologous LAL or a heterologous LAL binding site and an LAL that have increased expression compared to a natural pair may be identified by (a) providing one or more LAL binding sites; (b) contacting one or more of the LAL binding sites with one or more LALs; (c) determining the binding affinity between a LAL binding site and an LAL, wherein a pair having increased expression is identified if the affinity between the LAL binding site and the LAL is greater than the affinity between the LAL binding site and its homologous LAL and/or the LAL at its homologous LAL binding site.
  • the binding affinity between the LAL binding site and the LAL is determined by determining the expression of a protein or compound by a cell which includes both the LAL and the LAL binding site.
  • the recombinant LAL is a constitutively active LAL.
  • the amino acid sequence of the LAL has been modified in such a way that it does not require the presence of an inducer compound for the altered LAL to engage its cognate binding site and activate transcription of a compound producing protein (e.g., polyketide synthase).
  • a constitutively active LAL to a host cell would likely result in increased expression of the compound-producing protein (e.g., polyketide synthase) and, in turn, increased production of the corresponding compound (e.g., polyketide).
  • FK gene clusters are arranged with a multicistronic architecture driven by multiple bidirectional promoter-operators that harbor conserved (in single or multiple, and inverted to each other and/or directly repeating) GGGGGT (SEQ ID NO: 179) motifs presumed to be LAL binding sites.
  • Bidirectional LAL promoters may be converted to unidirectional ones (UniLALs) by strategically deleting one of the opposing promoters, but maintaining the tandem LAL binding sites (in case binding of LALs in the native promoter is cooperative, as was demonstrated for MalT).
  • the host cell is a bacteria such as an Actiobacterium.
  • the host cell is a Streptomyces strain.
  • the host cell is Streptomyces anulatus, Streptomyces antibioticus, Streptomyces coelicolor, Streptomyces peucetius, Streptomyces sp.
  • Streptomyces canus Streptomyces nodosus, Streptomyces (multiple sp.), Streptoalloteicus hindustanus, Streptomyces hygroscopicus, Streptomyces avermitilis, Streptomyces viridochromogenes, Streptomyces verticillus, Streptomyces chartruensis, Streptomyces (multiple sp.), Saccharothrix mutabilis, Streptomyces halstedii, Streptomyces clavuligerus, Streptomyces venezuelae, Strteptomyces roseochromogenes, Amycolatopsis orientalis, Streptomyces clavuligerus, Streptomyces rishiriensis, Streptomyces lavendulae, Streptomyces roseosporus, Nonomuraea sp., Streptomyces peucetius
  • Streptomyces aureofaciens Streptomyces natalensis, Streptomyces chattanoogensis L 10, Streptomyces lydicus A02, Streptomyces fradiae, Streptomyces ambofaciens, Streptomyces tendae, Streptomyces noursei, Streptomyces avermitilis, Streptomyces rimosus, Streptomyces wedmorensis, Streptomyces cacaoi, Streptomyces pristinaespiralis, Streptomyces pristinaespiralis, Actinoplanes sp. ATCC 33076, Streptomyces hygroscopicus, Lechevalieria aerocolonegenes, Amycolatopsis mediterranei,
  • Amycolatopsis lurida Streptomyces albus, Streptomyces griseolus, Streptomyces spectabilis
  • Saccharopolyspora spinosa Streptomyces ambofaciens, Streptomyces staurosporeus, Streptomyces griseus, Streptomyces (multiple species), Streptomyces acromogenes, Streptomyces tsukubaensis,
  • the host cell is an Escherichia strain such as Escherichia coli.
  • the host cell is a Bacillus strain such as Bacillus subtilis.
  • the host cell is a Pseudomonas strain such as Pseudomonas putitda.
  • the host cell is a Myxococcus strain such as Myxococcus xanthus.
  • Compound 1 (FIG. 3A). Seven of the 10 predicted donor modules, ranging in length from 4-6kb, were selectively amplified in their entirety using a GC-rich long PCR method. In parallel, a bacterial artificial chromosome (BAC) that harbored the PKS that produces Compound 1 was converted to a module swap acceptor for heterologous donor modules by introducing the restriction sites AM and Spe ⁇ to the flanking intermodule sequence of module 3. The modified acceptor BAC was linearized by digestion with Afl ⁇ and Spe ⁇ , and the 7 donor modules were gel-purified and subcloned by Gibson cloning.
  • BAC bacterial artificial chromosome
  • the resulting constructs were subjected to Sanger sequencing of region of interest, PCR-based analysis to confirm cluster integrity, and lllumina NGS to sequence the entire BAC.
  • the PCR-mediated error rate of the module amplification protocol was determined to be approximately 1 bp per 5000bp, or approximately 1 mutation per module.
  • a single module was swapped to produce an engineered PKS by replacing module 3 of the PKS that produces Compound 1 with module 3 of Streptomyces strain S317.
  • the donor S317 module 3 was PCR amplified and Gibson cloned into position 3 of the PKS that produces Compound 1 (FIG. 3B).
  • the resulting clone was conjugated into a Streptomyces expression host and fermented.
  • Production of compound was analyzed by LC-TOF mass spectrometry analysis by co-injecting purified native FKBP12, the protein to which both compounds are expected to bind, with either the product of the native PKS, Compound 1 , or the compound produced by the engineered PKS cluster, Compound 2.
  • Compound 2 was re- fermented at large scale, purified to homogeneity and the structure was confirmed by NMR spectroscopy.
  • module swapping prediction algorithms based on inter-module covariation were used to generate a list of 16 modules encoding 4 chemistries.
  • Gibson-based subcloning into module 4 was not as efficient as module 3.
  • Gibson cloning, which involves a ssDNA intermediate, is difficult in high GC-rich regions, and direct ligation of donor modules to restriction sites with 4bp overhangs may not be sensitive to local GC content. Therefore AM and Spe ⁇ sites were introduced at new positions in the inter-module flanking region to generate a direct ligation acceptor BAC.
  • This direct ligation acceptor BAC was linearized by digestion with AM and Spel, and 12 donor modules were gel-purified, digested with Afl ⁇ and Xba ⁇ and subcloned by ligation.
  • Compound 1 was produced by dimodule swapping. A total of 31 modules were amplified for transfer the module 3 position and 25 modules for the module 4 position of the PKS that produces Compound 1 (FIG. 4E). Clusters were cloned onto BACs, and the cloned BACs were subsequently used as templates to PCR modules of diverse sources from multiple heterologous donors.
  • a library corresponding to 15 different donor modules at the module 3 position and 15 different donor modules at the module 4 position was characterized by Nanopore sequencing (FIG. 4G).
  • the dimodules present in the 15x15 dimodule library were excised from the PKS clusters using CRISPR/Cas9 (NEB).
  • the resulting excised dimodules each had a length of approximately 7-12 kilobases.
  • the dimodules were purified by 96-well column purification, and well-specific adaptors were ligated to the dimodules.
  • the resulting dimodules were normalized and pooled and prepared for sequencing according to the standard ligation preparation protocol for Nanopore sequencing of oligonucleotides.
  • Nine 96-well plates (864 dimodule clones total) were sequenced by Nanopore and the resulting sequencing data was analyzed according to the informatics workflow provided in FIG. 4H, with 73.1 % of clones being called.
  • the comparison of the resulting sequencing data against the table of input of the donor modules allows the deconvolution of the resulting combinatorial library by identification of the resulting dimodules.
  • the results of Nanopore sequencing of the 15x15 dimodule library are provided in Table 1 . Table 1 .
  • the combinatorial module swap protocols were modified to generate trimodule assemblies in the PKS that produces Compound 7 (FIG. 5A).
  • Trimodule assembly leverages the technical advances of the dimodule protocol with an additional
  • a Gibson Assembly Ultra Kit (SGI-DNA) was used to clone the trimodule assembly into the PKS that produces Compound 7 enabling the replacement of Modules 4, 5, and 6 and simultaneously removal of the additional extraneous Pmel sequence retained after digestion. This resulted in >95% correct assembly for the industrial scale production of compounds produced by trimodule swapped PKS clusters (>200 per week).
  • Example 5 Ring expansion by swapping a single module acceptor with a dimodule donor
  • a heterologous dimodule donor assembly encoding mDEK chemistry and K chemistry was swapped into module 3, a single module acceptor, of the PKS that produces Compound 1 by the methods described above (FIG. 6A).
  • the compound produced by engineered PKS, Compound 8 was observed in high yield and had a mass of 655.41 , as determined by LC-TOF analysis (FIG. 6B). This corresponds to a ring-expanded compound product in which Compound 8 contains an additional 2-carbon extender unit.
  • reprogramming PKS biosynthesis via module swapping by insertion of a dimodule assembly to replace a single module may produce functional PKS expression.
  • Example 6 Module swapping of a PKS loading module
  • Rapamycin is a natural product synthesized by a mixed polyketide synthase (PKS)/nonribosomal peptide synthetase (NRPS) system. Rapamycin shares a common structural motif with related natural product FK506 which is responsible for binding to FK506-binding proteins (FKBPs).
  • PKS mixed polyketide synthase
  • NRPS nonribosomal peptide synthetase
  • FKBPs FK506-binding proteins
  • loading modules bind and load a 4,5-dihydroxycyclohexa-1 ,5-dienecarboxylic acid starter unit via a CaiC domain, which functions as a carboxylic acid ligase (CL) like domain (FIG. 7A).
  • Loading modules may possess similar domain structure as conventional elongation PKS modules, including ketoreductase-like domains and an enoyl-reductase domain, which may or may not be catalytically active.
  • the final chemistry of the starter unit depends on the presence and the sequence of the domains in the loading module, so the resulting "starter unit" can be engineered by swapping the loading module
  • the X23 PKS cluster produces Compound 9 and Compound 1 0 (FIG. 7B).
  • the Rapamycin loading module from Streptomyces stain S303 was swapped into the X23 cluster by the methods described previously for a single module swap.
  • the engineered PKS produced Compounds 1 1 and 12, in which the starter unit is replaced with the starter unit of Rapamycin. Additional single elongation module swaps of Module 2 and Module 7 of X23 produced Compounds 13 and 14, respectively.
  • articles such as “a,” “an,” and “the” may mean one or more than one unless indicated to the contrary or otherwise evident from the context. Claims or descriptions that include “or” between one or more members of a group are considered satisfied if one, more than one, or all of the group members are present in, employed in, or otherwise relevant to a given product or process unless indicated to the contrary or otherwise evident from the context.
  • the invention includes embodiments in which exactly one member of the group is present in, employed in, or otherwise relevant to a given product or process.
  • the invention includes embodiments in which more than one, or all of the group members are present in, employed in, or otherwise relevant to a given product or process.
  • any particular embodiment of the present invention that falls within the prior art may be explicitly excluded from any one or more of the claims. Since such embodiments are deemed to be known to one of ordinary skill in the art, they may be excluded even if the exclusion is not set forth explicitly herein. Any particular embodiment of the compositions of the invention (e.g., any polynucleotide or protein encoded thereby; any method of production; any method of use) can be excluded from any one or more claims, for any reason, whether or not related to the existence of prior art.

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US10894812B1 (en) 2020-09-30 2021-01-19 Alpine Roads, Inc. Recombinant milk proteins
US10947552B1 (en) 2020-09-30 2021-03-16 Alpine Roads, Inc. Recombinant fusion proteins for producing milk proteins in plants
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US11685928B2 (en) 2020-09-30 2023-06-27 Nobell Foods, Inc. Recombinant fusion proteins for producing milk proteins in plants
US11840717B2 (en) 2020-09-30 2023-12-12 Nobell Foods, Inc. Host cells comprising a recombinant casein protein and a recombinant kinase protein
US11952606B2 (en) 2020-09-30 2024-04-09 Nobell Foods, Inc. Food compositions comprising recombinant milk proteins
US12077798B2 (en) 2020-09-30 2024-09-03 Nobell Foods, Inc. Food compositions comprising recombinant milk proteins
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US12241109B2 (en) 2020-09-30 2025-03-04 Nobell Foods, Inc. Host cells comprising a recombinant casein protein and a recombinant kinase protein

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