Project Summary/Abstract
Combinatorial biosynthesis and metabolism studies of novel tetracenomycins
Anthracyclines are natural product antibiotics that are among the most effective anticancer drugs used in the
clinic. Biosynthetic modification of anthracyclines is a promising strategy to generate new chemical analogs
with differentiated anticancer activities and expanded therapeutic windows. Elloramycin (ELM, 1) is an
anthracycline antibiotic produced by Streptomyces olivaceus Tü 2353 that features a tetracyclic elloramycinone
aglycone and an appended 8-O-2,3,4-tri-O-methyl-a-L-rhamnose sugar. Elloramycins and tetracenomycins
(TCMs) exhibit mild antiproliferative activity due to inhibition of DNA topoisomerase II. Furthermore,
optimization of the deoxysugar moiety is essential for refining the cellular penetration, potency, clearance, and
metabolism of the analogs. However, we still do not fully understand the structure-activity-relationships of the
TCM deoxysugar on antiproliferative activity and drug metabolism. Furthermore, despite preparation of >20
different analogs of ELM, the SAR of these analogs has not yet been assessed rigorously in a panel of cancer
cell lines. Our long-term goal is to produce anthracycline analogs with improved antiproliferative activity. To
facilitate production of analogs, we will exploit the S. lividans (cos16F4) expression system to alter the
deoxysugar moiety of tetracenomycins via combinatorial biosynthesis. This comprehensive platform will
facilitate development of new drug leads for use in human cancer. The overall objectives of the proposed
research are three-fold: (1) to synthesize novel TCM derivatives, (2) to validate the anticancer activity of the
TCMs, and (3) to develop a S9 fraction assay to evaluate metabolism of 1 and the most active analogs. Our
hypotheses are that (1) ElmGT will be “substrate-flexible” enough to transfer the intended TDP-deoxysugar
donors to 8-demethyl-tetracenomycin C, (2) the appended deoxysugar will alter the anticancer activity via
binding to topoisomerase II and DNA, and (3) it will alter drug metabolism via differential binding to hepatic
cytochrome P450s. Our specific aims will test these hypotheses: (Aim 1) we will heterologously express “sugar
plasmids” in S. lividans (cos16F4) to alter the TCM deoxysugar moiety, (Aim 2) we will evaluate the
antiproliferative activity of the new TCM analogs, (Aim 3) we will develop a S9 fraction assay to determine the
metabolic profile of TCM analogs. The rationale is that the “substrate-flexible” glycosyltransferase, ElmGT,
should accept the novel TDP-deoxysugar donors. This contribution is significant because the expected
production platform will more fully explore the chemical space of TCM analogs. Furthermore, this research is
innovative because we are investigating the impact of deoxysugar modifications on antitumoral activity and
metabolism of tetracenomycins, drug properties which are currently not well-understood.