Actinomycin D is composed of a central
phenoxazinone chromophore tethered to two identical cyclic peptides and was first structurally characterized by Nuclear Magnetic Resonance (NMR) analysis in 1982. The biosynthesis of Actinomycin D has been under investigation since its discovery; early fermentation feeding experiments revealed the roles of both
tryptophan and
D-glutamate as precursor substrates, The 4-MHA substrate was shown to be produced from tryptophan through the action of enzymes such as
tryptophan dioxygenase,
kynurenine formamidase,
kynurenine hydroxylase,
hydroxykynurenase, and
methyltransferase. Early experiments elucidated the presence of non-ribosomal peptide synthetases, and subsequent purification and heterologous expression experiments showed the
acmD and
acmA genes to be responsible for activation of the 4-MHA, which then undergoes chain elongation through the action of the
acmB and
acmC genes. In total, the NRPS assembly line is composed of twenty-two modules, including two each of
epimerase and
methylase domains. Recent sequencing of the actinomycin D gene cluster in
Streptomyces chrysomallus showed that the four NRPS genes were surrounded on both sides by the two clusters of the genes involved in the well-studied
kynurenine pathway and responsible for the production of 4-MHA from tryptophan, with nine
paralogs identified between the two clusters. == References ==