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      Molecular insights on the biosynthesis of antitumour compounds by actinomycetes

      review-article
      , , *
      Microbial Biotechnology
      Blackwell Publishing Ltd

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          Summary

          Natural products are traditionally the main source of drug leads. In particular, many antitumour compounds are either natural products or derived from them. However, the search for novel antitumour drugs active against untreatable tumours, with fewer side‐effects or with enhanced therapeutic efficiency, is a priority goal in cancer chemotherapy. Microorganisms, particularly actinomycetes, are prolific producers of bioactive compounds, including antitumour drugs, produced as secondary metabolites. Structural genes involved in the biosynthesis of such compounds are normally clustered together with resistance and regulatory genes, which facilitates the isolation of the gene cluster. The characterization of these clusters has represented, during the last 25 years, a great source of genes for the generation of novel derivatives by using combinatorial biosynthesis approaches: gene inactivation, gene expression, heterologous expression of the clusters or mutasynthesis. In addition, these techniques have been also applied to improve the production yields of natural and novel antitumour compounds. In this review we focus on some representative antitumour compounds produced by actinomycetes covering the genetic approaches used to isolate and validate their biosynthesis gene clusters, which finally led to generating novel derivatives and to improving the production yields.

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          Assembly-line enzymology for polyketide and nonribosomal Peptide antibiotics: logic, machinery, and mechanisms.

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            Natural products to drugs: natural product-derived compounds in clinical trials.

            Natural product and natural product-derived compounds that are being evaluated in clinical trials or are in registration (as at 31st December 2007) have been reviewed, as well as natural product-derived compounds for which clinical trials have been halted or discontinued since 2005. Also discussed are natural product-derived drugs launched since 2005, new natural product templates and late-stage development candidates.
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              Renaissance in antibacterial discovery from actinomycetes.

              The soil actinomycetes have been important sources of antibiotics, but were nearly abandoned in recent years in favor of high-throughput target-based screening of chemical libraries. The latter approach has not been productive, so it is time to reinvigorate the discovery of new antibiotics from a proven source. Recent progress has been made on antibiotic discovery from actinomycetes by using high-throughput fermentation, isolation of marine actinomycetes, mining genomes for cryptic pathways, and combinatorial biosynthesis to generate new secondary metabolites related to existing pharmacophores.
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                Author and article information

                Journal
                Microb Biotechnol
                Microb Biotechnol
                MBT
                Microbial Biotechnology
                Blackwell Publishing Ltd (Oxford, UK )
                1751-7915
                1751-7915
                March 2011
                22 February 2011
                : 4
                : 2
                : 144-164
                Affiliations
                Departamento de Biología Funcional and Instituto Universitario de Oncología del Principado de Asturias (I.U.O.P.A), Universidad de Oviedo, 33006 Oviedo, Spain.
                Author notes
                *E‐mail jasalas@ 123456uniovi.es ; Tel. (+34) 985 103652; Fax (+34) 985 103652.
                Article
                10.1111/j.1751-7915.2010.00231.x
                3818856
                21342461
                e331f780-5a81-4e7b-8c63-e410cd5381c9
                Copyright © 2010 The Authors. Journal compilation © 2010 Society for Applied Microbiology and Blackwell Publishing Ltd
                History
                : 21 June 2010
                : 04 October 2010
                Categories
                Minireviews

                Biotechnology
                Biotechnology

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