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Biosynthesis of 14-membered cyclopeptide alkaloids via non-heme-iron- and 2-oxoglutarate-dependent oxidative decarboxylation

Hungerford, J.; Mydy, L. S.; Wang, X.; Mendoza-Perez, L.; Ousley, D. A.; Shafiq, K.; McDonough, K. M.; Li, W.; May, G.; Chigumba, D.; Yao, S.; Kersten, R. D.

2026-01-23 biochemistry
10.64898/2026.01.20.700549 bioRxiv
Show abstract

Cyclopeptide alkaloids are an expanding class of plant peptide natural products defined by a macrocyclic ether-crosslink via a tyrosine-derived phenol. Classical cyclopeptide alkaloids are characterized by strained 13-to 15-membered cyclophanes and terminal modifications such as N-methylation and C-terminal styrylamine moieties. While synthetic access to many classical cyclopeptide alkaloids has been established, no biosynthetic route has been reported. Here, we elucidate the biosynthetic pathway of a 14-membered cyclopeptide alkaloid, lotusine A, from Chinese date tree (Ziziphus jujuba) which features peptide cyclization on a ribosomal precursor peptide by a split burpitide cyclase, non-heme-iron and 2-oxoglutarate-dependent oxidative decarboxylation affording the C-terminal hydroxystyrylamine, and SAM-dependent N-terminal -N,N-dimethylation. We apply discovered Z. jujuba enzymes in combination with a clubmoss cyclopeptide alkaloid cyclase for biosynthesis and diversification of analgesic adouetine X and anxiolytic sanjoinine A by combining in planta and in vitro reactions. Our work expands the biocatalytic repertoire of non-heme-iron- and 2-oxoglutarate-dependent enzymology to oxidative peptide decarboxylation and primes scaled metabolic engineering and chemoenzymatic synthesis of 14-membered cyclopeptide alkaloids with terminal posttranslational modifications.

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