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Structure of the lipopeptide antibiotic tsushimycin
ISSN
0907-4449
Date Issued
2005
Author(s)
DOI
10.1107/S0907444905017270
Abstract
The amphomycin derivative tsushimycin has been crystallized and its structure determined at 1.0 angstrom resolution. The asymmetric unit contains 12 molecules and with 1300 independent atoms this structure is one of the largest solved using ab initio direct methods. The antibiotic is comprised of a cyclodecapeptide core, an exocyclic amino acid and a fatty-acid residue. Its backbone adopts a saddle-like conformation that is stabilized by a Ca2+ ion bound within the peptide ring and accounts for the Ca2+-dependence of this antibiotic class. Additional Ca2+ ions link the antibiotic molecules to dimers that enclose an empty space resembling a binding cleft. The dimers possess a large hydrophobic surface capable of interacting with the bacterial cell membrane. The antibiotic daptomycin may exhibit a similar conformation, as the amino-acid sequence is conserved at positions involved in Ca2+ binding.