Rapid screening platform for discovering novel peptide prenyltransferases to expand the structural diversity of pseudo-natural prenylated peptides

03 December 2025, Version 1
This content is an early or alternative research output and has not been peer-reviewed by Cambridge University Press at the time of posting.

Abstract

Peptide lipidation can enhance stability and permeability, yet biocatalysts for late-stage, site- and mode-selective modification remain limited. We established a streamlined activity-profiling system that rapidly assesses peptide-prenylating activities using an artificial substrate set. Screening 19 recombinant, putative cyanobactin prenyltransferases (PTases) uncovered 14 active enzymes with diverse catalytic properties, including five unprecedented modes of prenylation, bifunctionality toward Trp/Tyr, and expanded donor utilization such as farnesylation. Co-crystal structures of seven PTases reveal how subtle active-site changes enable dual substrate recognition and accommodation of bulkier donors, highlighting the evolutionary diversification of catalytic functions. The enzymes tolerate non-native substrates, enabling late-stage, site- and mode-selective lipidation to construct pseudo-natural peptides. Together, these findings drastically expand the enzymatic and mechanistic landscape of cyanobactin PTases, substantially enlarging their functional repertoire and revealing the structural principles that govern the diversification of peptide prenylation chemistry.

Supplementary materials

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Table S1
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List of sequences used for SSN analysis.
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Table S2
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Protein sequences of PTase candidates tested in this study.
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Table S3
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List of LC-MS peaks for the 64 probing peptides.
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Table S4
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List of the detected LC-MS peaks corresponding to prenylated probing peptides.
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Table S13
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List of the primers used in this study.
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Supplementary Information
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Materials and methods, supplementary figures, and supplementary tables
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