Hurley L H, Lasswell W L, Ostrander J M, Parry R
Biochemistry. 1979 Sep 18;18(19):4230-7. doi: 10.1021/bi00586a030.
This paper descirbes biosynthetic labeling experiments on the conversion of tyrosine to the C2- and C3-proline units of anthramycin, tomaymycin, and sibiromycin. The biosynthetic fate of all of the aromatic and side-chain hydrogens has been determined in each antibiotic by using dual tagged (3H/14C) and 2H-labeled tyrosine molecules. In addition, experiments uing [15N]tyrosine and the tritiated D and L isomers of tyrosine have shed some light on the biochemical reactions which take place at tha alpha position of tyrosine. On the basis of results of all these experiments, a biosynthetic scheme had been proposed to rationalize the apparent inconsistencies which occur between the results for the three antibiotics. This scheme proposes that a common main pathway involving proximal extradiol cleavage of Dopa and condensation to form the pyrrolo ring leads ultimately to a C-7 branch point compound. Parallel pathways from this central branch point compound lead by well-known biochemical transformations to the C2-and C3-proline units of anthramycin, tomaymycin, and sibiromycin. The reactions in these parallel pathways are suggested to be "cosmetic or after events".