POLYKETIDE

'Polyketides' are secondary metabolites from bacteria, fungi, plants, and animals. Secondary metabolites seem to be unnecessary for an organism’s ontogeny, but appear to have applications such as defence and intercellular communication. Polyketides are derived from the polymerization of acetyl and propionyl subunits in a similar process to fatty acid synthesis. They also serve as building blocks for a broad range of natural products or are derivatized.
Polyketides are structurally a very diverse family of natural products with an extremely broad range of biological activities and pharmacological properties. Polyketide antibiotics, antifungals, cytostatics, anticholesterolemics, antiparasitics, coccidiostatics, animal growth promotants and natural insecticides are in commercial use.

Contents
Examples
Biosynthesis
See also

Examples



Macrolides


Picromycin, the first isolated macrolide (1950)


★ The antibiotics erythromycin A, clarithromycin, and azithromycin


★ The immunosuppressant tacrolimus (FK506)

Polyene antibiotics


Amphotericin

Tetracyclines


★ The tetracycline family of antibiotics

★ Others


Discodermolide

Biosynthesis


Polyketides are synthesized by one or more specialized polyketide synthase (PKS) enzymes.

See also



Esterase

Nonribosomal peptide

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