Abstract:
Host cells comprising recombinant vectors encoding the narbomycin polyketide synthase and narbomycin modification enzymes from  Streptomyces narbonensis  can be used to produce narbomycin, picromycin, methymycin, and neomethymycin. Recombinant DNA constructs comprising one or more narbomycin polyketide synthase domains, modules, open reading frames, and variants thereof can be used to produce recombinant polyketide synthases and a variety of different polyketides with application in agriculture, medicine, and animal health.

Description:
CROSS-REFERENCE TO RELATED APPLICATIONS 
     This application is related by claim of priority to provisional U.S. patent application Ser. No. 60/107,093, filed Nov. 5, 1998, and is a continuation-in-part of Ser. No. 09/320,878 filed May 27, 1999 U.S. Pat. No. 6,117,659 issued Sep. 12, 2000, each of which is incorporated herein by reference. 
    
    
     FIELD OF THE INVENTION 
     The present invention relates to polyketides and the polyketide synthase (“PKS”) enzymes that produce them. The invention also relates generally to genes encoding PKS enzymes and to recombinant host cells containing such genes and in which expression of such genes leads to the production of polyketides. Thus, the invention relates to the fields of chemistry, molecular biology, and agricultural, medical, and veterinary technology. 
     BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION 
     Polyketides represent a large family of diverse compounds synthesized from 2-carbon units through a series of condensations and subsequent modifications. Avermectin, candicidin, epothilone, erythromycin, FK-506, FK-520, narbomycin, oleandomycin, picromycin, rapamycin, spincoyn, tetracycline, and tylosin are examples of such compounds. Polyketides occur in many types of organisms, including fungi and mycelial bacteria, in particular, the actinomycetes. Given the difficulty in producing polyketide compounds by traditional chemical methodology, and the typically low expression of polyketides in wild-type cells that produce them naturally, there has been considerable interest in finding improved or alternate means to produce polyketide compounds. 
     This interest has resulted in the cloning, analysis, and manipulation by recombinant DNA technology of genes that encode PKS enzymes. For example, the following publications relate generally to the cloning of all or parts of the genes coding for the expression of PKS enzymes or other enzymes that act on polyketides of significant commercial interest or potential. 
     Avermectin 
     U.S. Pat. No. 5,252,474 to Merck. 
     MacNeil et al., 1993 , Industrial Microorganisms: Basic and Applied Molecular Genetics , Baltz, Hegeman, &amp; Skatrud, eds. (ASM), pp. 245-256, A Comparison of the Genes Encoding the Polyketide Synthases for Avermectin, Erythromycin, and Nemadectin. 
     MacNeil et al., 1992 , Gene  115: 119-125, Complex Organization of the  Streptomyces avermitilis  genes encoding the avermectin polyketide synthase. 
     Candicidin (FRO008) 
     Hu et al., 1994 , Mol. Microbiol . 14: 163-172. 
     Epothilone 
     U.S. patent application Ser. No. 60/130,560, filed Apr. 22, 1999, and Ser. No. 60/122,620, filed Mar. 3, 1999. 
     Erythromycin 
     PCT Pub. No. 93/13663 to Abbott. 
     U.S. Pat. No. 5,824,513 to Abbott. 
     Donadio et al., 1991 , Science  252:675-9. 
     Cortes et al., Nov. 8, 1990 , Nature  348:176-8, An unusually large multifunctional polypeptide in the erythromycin producing polyketide synthase of  Saccharopolyspora erythraea.    
     Glycosylation Enzymes 
     PCT Pat. App. Pub. No. 97/23630 to Abbott. 
     FK-506 
     Motamedi et al., 1998, The biosynthetic gene cluster for the macrolactone ring of the immunosuppressant FK506 , Eur. J. biochem . 256: 528-534. 
     Motamedi et al., 1997, Structural organization of a multifunctional polyketide synthase involved in the biosynthesis of the macrolide immunosuppressant FK506 , Eur. J. Biochem . 244: 74-80. 
     Methyltransferase 
     U.S. Pat. No. 5,264,355, issued Nov. 23, 1993, Methylating enzyme from Streptomyces MA6858. 31-O-desmethyl-FK506 methyltransferase. 
     Motamedi et al., 1996, Characterization of methyltransferase and hydroxylase 40 genes involved in the biosynthesis of the immunosuppressants FK506 and FK520 , J. Bacteriol . 178: 5243-5248. 
     FK-520 
     U.S. patent application Ser. No. 60/139,650, filed Jun. 17, 1999, and Ser. No. 60/123,810, filed Mar. 11, 1999. See also Nielsen et al., 1991 , Biochem . 30:5789-96 (enzymology of pipecolate incorporation). 
     Lovastatin 
     U.S. Pat. No. 5,744,350 to Merck. 
     Nemadectin 
     MacNeil et al., 1993, supra. 
     Niddamycin 
     Kakavas et al., 1997, Identification and characterization of the niddamycin polyketide synthase genes from  Streptomyces caelestis, J. Bacteriol . 179: 7515-7522. 
     Oleandomycin 
     Swan et al., 1994, Characterisation of a  Streptomyces antibioticus  gene encoding a type I polyketide synthase which has an unusual coding sequence,  Mol. Gen. Genet . 242: 358-362. 
     U.S. patent application Ser. No. 60/120,254, filed Feb. 16, 1999. 
     Olano et al., 1998, Analysis of a  Streptomyces antibioticus  chromosomal region involved in oleandomycin biosynthesis, which encodes two glycosyltransferases responsible for glycosylation of the macrolactone ring,  Mol. Gen. Genet . 259(3): 299-308. 
     Platenolide 
     EP Pat. App. Pub. No. 791,656 to Lilly. 
     Rapamycin 
     Schwecke et al., August 1995, The biosynthetic gene cluster for the polyketide rapamycin,  Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA  92:7839-7843. 
     Aparicio et al., 1996, Organization of the biosynthetic gene cluster for rapamycin in  Streptomyces hygroscopicus : analysis of the enzymatic domains in the modular polyketide synthase,  Gene  169: 9-16. 
     Rifamycin 
     August et al., Feb. 13, 1998, Biosynthesis of the ansamycin antibiotic rifamycin: deductions from the molecular analysis of the rif biosynthetic gene cluster of  Amycolatopsis mediterranei  S669 , Chemistry  &amp;  Biology , 5(2): 69-79. 
     Soraphen 
     U.S. Pat. No. 5,716,849 to Novartis. 
     Schupp et al., 1995 , J. Bacteriology  177: 3673-3679. A  Sorangium cellulosum  (Myxobacterium) Gene Cluster for the Biosynthesis of the Macrolide Antibiotic Soraphen A: Cloning, Characterization, and Homology to Polyketide Synthase Genes from Actinomycetes. 
     Spiramycin 
     U.S. Pat. No. 5,098,837 to Lilly. 
     Activator Gene 
     U.S. Pat. No. 5,514,544 to Lilly. 
     Tylosin 
     EP Pub. No. 791,655 to Lilly. 
     Kuhstoss et al., 1996 , Gene  183:231-6., Production of a novel polyketide through the construction of a hybrid polyketide synthase. 
     U.S. Pat. No. 5,876,991 to Lilly. 
     Tailoring enzymes 
     Merson-Davies and Cundliffe, 1994 , Mol. Microbiol . 13: 349-355. Analysis of five tylosin biosynthetic genes from the tylBA region of the  Streptomyces fradiae  genome. 
     Each of the above-referenced patent applications, patents, and publications is incorporated by reference herein. 
     The cloning of PKS genes has been accompanied by advances in technology allowing one to manipulate a known PKS gene(s) either to produce the polyketide synthesized by the corresponding PKS at higher levels than occur in nature or in hosts that otherwise do not produce the polyketide. The technology also allows one to produce molecules that are structurally related to, but distinct from, the polyketide produced from a known PKS. See, e.g., PCT publication Nos. WO 95/08548; WO 96/40968; 97/02358; and 98/27203; U.S. Pat. Nos. 5,672,491; and 5,712,146; and Fu et al., 1994 , Biochemistry  33: 9321-9326; McDaniel et al., 1993 , Science  262: 1546-1550; and Cane et al., Oct. 2, 1998, Harnessing the Biosynthetic Code: Combinations, Permutations, and Mutations,  Science  282: 63-68, each of which is incorporated herein by reference. 
     PKS enyzmes are similar to, but distinct from, the synthases that catalyze condensation of 2-carbon units in the biosynthesis of fatty acids. Two major types of PKS enzymes are found in nature: these types are commonly referred to as Type I or “modular” and Type II “aromatic” PKS enzymes. A third type sometimes referred to in the scientific literature is a “fungal PKS”; however, for purposes of the present invention, this type is to be considered a Type I PKS. These types differ in their composition and mode of synthesis of the polyketide synthesized. Type I PKSs are typically found in nature as complexes of multiple very large proteins. In this type, a set of separate catalytic active sites (each active site is termed a “domain”, and a set thereof is termed a “module”) exists for each cycle of carbon chain elongation and modification in the polyketide synthesis pathway. 
     The active sites and modules of a typical Type I PKS enzyme are shown in FIG. 9 of PCT patent publication No. WO 95/08548, which depicts a model of 6-deoxyerythronolide B synthase (“DEBS”), which is involved in the synthesis of erythromycin. Six separate modules, each catalyzing a round of condensation and modification of a 2-carbon unit, are present in DEBS. The number and type of catalytic domains that are present in each module varies, and the total of 6 extender modules and a loading module is provided on 3 separate proteins (designated DEBS-1, DEBS-2, and DEBS-3, with 2 modules per protein). The catalytic domains of the DEBS polypeptides provide a representative example of Type I PKS structure. In this particular case, the loading module and extender modules 1 and 2 reside on DEBS-1, extender modules 3 and 4 on DEBS-2, and extender modules 5 and 6 on DEBS-3; module 1 is the first module to act on the growing polyketide backbone, and module 6 the last. Each module of consists of at least two (if a loading module) and more typically three or more enzymatic activities or “domains.” 
     A typical (non-starter) minimal Type I PKS module is typified by module 3 of DEBS, which contains a ketosynthase (“KS”) domain, an acyltransferase (“AT”) domain, and an acyl carrier protein (“ACP”) domain. These three enzyme activities are sufficient to activate the 2-carbon extender unit and attach it to the growing polyketide molecule. Additional domains that may be included in a module relate to reactions other than the actual condensation, and include a ketoreductase activity (“KR”) activity, a dehydratase activity (“DH”), and an enoylreductase activity (“ER”). With respect to DEBS-1, the first module thereof also contains repeats of the AT and ACP activities because it catalyzes initial condensation, i.e., it begins with a “loading domain” consisting of an AT and an ACP domain that determines the nature of the starter unit. 
     The “finishing” of the 6-deoxyerythronolide molecule is regulated by a thioesterase (“TE”) activity in module 6. The TE activity catalyzes cyclization of the macrolide ring by formation of an ester linkage. In FK-506, FK-520, rapamycin, and similar polyketides, the ester linkage formed by the TE activity is replaced by a linkage formed by incorporation of a picolate acid residue. The enzymatic activity that catalyzes this incorporation for the rapamycin enzyme is known as rapP. 
     In PKS polypeptides, the regions that confer enzymatic activity (domains) are separated by linker or “scaffold”-encoding regions. These scaffold regions encode amino acid sequences that space the enzymatic activities (domains) at the appropriate distances and in the correct order. Thus, the linker regions of a PKS protein collectively can be considered to encode a scaffold into which the various domains (and thus modules) are placed in a particular order and spatial arrangement Generally, this organization permits PKS domains of different or identical substrate specificities to be substituted (usually at the DNA level) between PKS enzymes by various available methodologies. Thus, there is considerable flexibility in the design of new PKS enzymes with the result that known polyketides can be produced more effectively, and novel polyketides useful as pharmaceuticals or for other purposes can be made. 
     Type I PKS enzymes are encoded by “PKS gene clusters.” PKS gene clusters usually consist of three or more open reading frames (“ORFs”), each encoding two or more modules of ketosynthase activity. For example, each of the DEBS polypeptides is encoded by a separate open reading frame (ORF). See Caffrey et al., 1992 , FEBS Letters  304: 205, incorporated herein by reference. 
     As noted above in connection with reference to enzymes that cyclize linear polyketides, additional structural complexity in polyketides arises from or can be introduced by various activities, including glycosylation, hydroxylation, methylation, and other enzymatic activities. The rapP enzymatic activity mentioned above is an example of one such activity; another example is the hydroxylation of a polyketide by an oxidase enzyme similar in structure and function to the cytochrome P450 oxidase enzyme. The genes encoding such enzymatic activities are often found in relatively close proximity to the PKS genes and so may be considered part of a PKS gene cluster. By appropriate application of recombinant DNA technology, a wide variety of polyketides can be prepared in a variety of different host cells provided one has access to nucleic acid compounds that encode PKS proteins and polyketide modification enzymes. 
     The present invention helps meet the need for such nucleic acid compounds, recombinant PKS enzymes, and recombinant enzymes that modify polyketides by providing recombinant vectors that encode the narbonolide PKS enzyme and various narbomycin modification enzymes. 
     SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION 
     The present invention provides recombinant DNA vectors that encode the narbonolide PKS enzyme and various narbomycin modification enzymes. Illustrative vectors of the invention include cosmids pKOSO37-23, pKOSO37-24, pKOSO37-25, and pKOSO37-26. 
     The present invention also provides nucleic acid compounds that encode the various domains of the various modules of the narbonolide PKS from the narbomycin producing strain  Streptomyces narbonensis . These domains include the KS, AT, ACP, KR, DH, ER, and TE domains. These compounds can be readily used, alone or in combination with nucleic acids encoding other PKS domains, as intermediates in the construction of recombinant vectors that encode PKS enzymes that make novel polyketides. 
     In one embodiment, the invention provides an isolated nucleic acid that encodes an activity of a polyketide synthase enzyme that synthesizes narbonolide, which is the key substrate for the synthesis of narbomycin. The encoded activity can be, for example and without limitation, a ketosynthase activity, an acyltransferase activity, or an acyl carrier protein activity. In another aspect, the invention provides an isolated nucleic acid that encodes a module, said module comprising a ketosynthase activity, an acyl transferase activity, and an acyl carrier protein activity. In another aspect, the invention provides an isolated nucleic acid that encodes an open reading frame, said open reading frame encoding two or more modules, at least one of which is derived from the narbonolide PKS. In another aspect, the invention provides an isolated nucleic acid that encodes a gene cluster, said gene cluster comprising two or more open reading frames. In another aspect, these isolated nucleic acids are incorporated within a recombinant expression vector. 
     In another embodiment, the invention provides an isolated nucleic acid that encodes a module in which at least one of the activities in the module is an activity of a non-narbomycin polyketide synthase. In one aspect, the invention provides an isolated nucleic acid that encodes an open reading frame comprising two or more modules, in which at least one of said modules is a module comprising an activity of a non-narbomycin polyketide synthase. In one aspect, the non-narbomycin polyketide synthase is either an erythromycin, a rapamycin, or a tylosin polyketide synthasee. In another aspect, these isolated nucleic acids are incorporated within a recombinant expression vector. 
     In another embodiment, the invention provides a method of preparing a polyketide, said method comprising transforming a host cell with a recombinant DNA vector that encodes a module of a polyketide synthase, said module comprising at least one narbomycin polyketide synthase activity, and culturing said host cell under conditions such that said polyketide synthase is produced and catalyzes synthesis of said polyketide. In one aspect, the method is practiced with a Streptomyces host cell. In another aspect, the polyketide produced is narbonolide or narbomycin. In another aspect, the polyketide produced is a polyketide related in structure to narbonolide or narbomycin. In another aspect, the polyketide produced is a polyketide related in structure to erythromycin, rapamycin, or tylosin. 
     These and other embodiments and aspects of the invention will be more fully understood after consideration of the attached Drawings and their brief description below, together with the detailed description, example, and claims that follow. 
    
    
     BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS 
     FIG. 1 shows a function maps of the insert DNA in various cosmids of the invention. The different cosmid inserts are identified with a reference number assigned to each cosmid, i.e., cosmid pKOSO37-23, pKOSO37-24, pKOSO37-25, and cosmid pKOSO37-26. The location of the coding sequences for modules 1-6 of the narbonolide PKS are also labeled (LD is the starter or loading module; 1 is extender module 1) as is the desosamine biosynthetic and transferase genes (labelled as “sugar genes”). 
     FIG. 2 shows a restriction site and function map of cosmid pKOS037-26. Various restriction sites (BglII, EcoRI) are also shown. The ORFs and modules of the narbonolide PKS and narbomycin modification enzymes are also shown, together with contigs identifying the contig sequences shown below. 
    
    
     DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE INVENTION 
     Given the valuable pharmaceutical properties of polyketides, there is a need for methods and reagents for producing large quantities of polyketides, for producing polyketides in host cells that do not produce polyketides naturally, and for producing novel polyketides compounds not found in nature. The present invention provides such methods and reagents, with particular application to methods and reagents for producing the polyketide known as narbonolide and its derivative narbomycin (collectively referred to herein as “narbomycin”) and novel compounds related through structure or genetics to narbomycin or the polyketide synthase that produces narbomycin. 
     In addition to providing methods for making narbomycin, the invention provides methods for making novel narbomycin analogs and derivatives, as well as reagents for making recombinant vectors that allow the production of narbomycin and its analogs in recombinant host cells of any origin. To obtain these reagents, genomic DNA was isolated from a narbomycin producing strain of  Streptomyces narbonensis , partially digested with restriction enzyme SauIIIA1, and cloned into commercially available SuperCos™ cosmid vector (Stratagene) digested with restriction enzyme BamHI to produce a genomic library. 
     This library was then probed with a labeled probe specific for PKS gene sequences. This probing identified about several different cosmids. Cosmid DNA was isolated and analyzed by restriction enzyme digestion, which revealed that the entire PKS gene cluster was contained in overlapping segments on two of the cosmids identified. DNA sequence analysis using the T3 and T7 primers showed that the desired DNA had been isolated. 
     Further analysis of these cosmids and subclones prepared from the cosmids facilitated the identification of the location of various narbonolide PKS ORFs, modules in those ORFs, and coding sequences for narbomycin modification enzymes. The location of these genes and modules is shown on FIG.  1 . 
     FIG. 1 shows that the complete narbonolide PKS gene cluster is contained within the insert DNA of cosmids pKOSO37-23 and pKOS037-26 (insert size of ˜44 kb). Each of these cosmids has been deposited with the American Type Culture Collection, Manassas, Va. 20110-2209, USA, in accordance with the terms of the Budapest Treaty (cosmid pKOS037-23 was deposited on Feb. 15, 2001 under accession no. ATCC PTA-3058; cosmid pKOS037-26 was deposited on Feb. 15, 2001 under accession no. ATCC PTA-3059). Various additional reagents of the invention can therefore be isolated from these cosmids. DNA sequence analysis was also performed on the various subclones of the invention, as described in Example 1 and in the sequence listing attached hereto. Based on the disclosure of this nucleotide sequence information as well as the known genetic code, the present invention provides a wide variety of useful compounds for constructing recombinant narbonolide PKS gene clusters, ORFs, modules, domains within modules, and modification enzymes. 
     Thus, the invention provides DNA molecules in isolated (i.e., not pure, but existing in a preparation in an abundance and/or concentration not found in nature) and purified (i.e., substantially free of contaminating materials or substantially free of materials with which the corresponding DNA would be found in nature) form. These DNA molecules comprise one or more sequences that encode one or more domains (or fragments of such domains) of one or more modules in one or more of the ORFs of the narbonolide PKS gene cluster. Examples of such domains include the KS, AT, DH, KR, EH, ACP, and TE domains of at least one of the loading and 6 extender modules of the four ORFs of the narbomycin gene cluster. 
     In one preferred embodiment, the invention provides a recombinant DNA vector that encodes the narbonolide PKS in three, as opposed to the naturally occurring four, ORFs. The recombinant vector codes for expression of a polypeptide that results from fusing the separate ORFs for modules 5 and 6 of the narbonolide PKS into a single ORF. The recombinant vector can be used to produce either narbomycin or picromycin (depending on choice of host cells and the presence of polyketide modifying enzymes) in recombinant host cells with decreased production of the 12-membered macrolactones as compared to the naturally occurring host cells that produce narbomycin and picromycin. 
     As the preceding discussion illustrates, in an especially preferred embodiment, the DNA molecules of the invention are recombinant DNA expression vectors or plasmids. Such vectors can either replicate in the cytoplasm of the host cell or integrate into the chromosomal DNA of the host cell. In either case, the vector can be a stable vector (i.e., the vector remains present over many cell divisions, even if only with selective pressure) or a transient vector (i.e., the vector is gradually lost by host cells with increasing numbers of cell divisions). 
     Thus, the various PKS-encoding nucleic acids of the invention can be cloned into one or more recombinant vectors individually or in combination with other nucleic acids. Each activity-encoding nucleic acid can be inserted into the vector with its own separate control elements, or multiple activity-encoding segments can be under the control of a single promoter in the vector. The PKS component nucleic acids of the invention therefore often include flanking restriction sites to allow for facile deletion, insertion, or other manipulation to assist in the construction of expression vectors. The implementation of restriction sites to facilitate vector construction is known to those of skill in the art and can be accomplished using the commonly known techniques, including those described below, such as site-directed mutagenesis and PCR. 
     The recombinant vectors of the invention will typically include suitable control sequences, or promoters, which include those which function in eucaryotic or procaryotic host cells. Preferred hosts cells for purposes of promoter selection for practice of the present invention include fungal cells, such as procaryotic cells, including Streptomyces cells, and eukaryotic cells, such as yeast and mammalian cells. Suitable control sequences for such cells are well known in the art. Control systems for expression in yeast, including control systems that include not only promoters but also enhancers, translation control sequences, such as ribosome-binding sites, and optionally sequences that direct of secretion are widely available and routinely used. 
     Particularly useful promoters for procaryotic host cells include those from PKS gene clusters that result in the production of polyketides as secondary metabolites, including those from aromatic (Type II) PKS gene clusters. Examples are act promoters, tcm promoters, erythromycin promoters, spiramycin promoters, promoters from antibiotic resistance-conferring genes including but not limited to ermE, and the like. However, other bacterial promoters, such as those derived from sugar metabolizing enzymes, such as galactose, lactose (lac) and maltose, are also useful. Additional examples include promoters derived from genes that encode biosynthetic enzymes such as for tryptophan (trp) or beta-lactamase (bla), and bacteriophage promoters, such as the lambda PL and T5 promoters. In addition, synthetic promoters, such as the tac promoter (U.S. Pat. No. 4,551,433), can be used. 
     Particularly useful promoters and control systems are those that activate transcription of ORFs and accordingly translation of the mRNA and expression of protein during transition of the host cell from growth to stationary phase (as occurs, for Streptomyces, in the vegetative mycelium). The control system contained in the plasmid identified as pCK7, i.e., the actI/actIII promoter pair and the actII-ORF4 gene (an activator gene), is particularly preferred. See U.S. Pat. Nos. 5,672,491 and 5,712,146, each of which is incorporated herein by reference. Generally, it may sometimes be desirable to allow for regulation of expression of the PKS gene cluster relative to the stage of growth of the host cell. Illustrative regulatory control sequences are known to those of skill in the art; examples include promoters that cause the expression of a gene to be turned on or off in response to a chemical or physical stimulus, including the presence of a specific compound. 
     Selectable markers can also be included in the recombinant expression vectors of the invention. A variety of selectable markers are known which are useful in selecting for transformed cell lines and generally comprise a gene whose expression confers a selectable phenotype on transformed cells when the cells are grown in an appropriate selective medium. Such markers include, for example, genes which confer antibiotic resistance, i.e., the tsr gene, which confers resistance to the antibiotic thiostrepton and is commonly used to select recombinant Streptomyces cells, or sensitivity to the plasmid. Alternatively, several polyketides are naturally colored, and this characteristic provides an alternative marker for screening cells successfully transformed with certain vectors of the invention. 
     Methods for introducing the recombinant vectors of the present invention into suitable hosts are known to those of skill in the art and typically include the use of CaCl 2  or other agents, such as divalent cations, lipofection, DMSO, protoplast transformation and electroporation. For Streptomyces cells, viral infection and conjugation are commonly used methods for transformation. 
     Particularly preferred host cells for certain applications of the present invention are those that do not otherwise (i.e., in the absence of transformation with a vector of the invention) produce a polyketide. Choice of such a host cell makes easier the determination that transformation has occurred as well as purification of the polyketide produced. Illustrative host cells of this type include the modified  Streptomyces coelicolor  CH999 host cell and other host cells described in U.S. Pat. Nos. 5,712,416 and 5,672,491, each of which is incorporated herein by reference. See also, U.S. patent application Ser. No. 60/101,557, filed Sep. 22, 1998, and the related application by claim of priority filed Oct. 28, 1998, Ser. No. 09/181,833, by the same inventors, both of which are incorporated herein by reference. Other host cells that can be utilized for purposes of the present invention include  E. coli , mammalian, Myxobacteria, Saccharomyces, Saccharopolyspora, Streptomyces, yeast, and plant cells; see, e.g., PCT patent publication No. WO 98/27203 and U.S. patent application Ser. No. 09/114,083, filed Jul. 10, 1998, both of which are incorporated herein by reference. 
     The recombinant DNA vectors and host cells of the invention can be used not only to produce narbomycin but also to produce other polyketide and polyketide-related compounds. In one aspect, the invention provides nucleic acids that encode a mutated form of a naturally-occurring narbonolide PKS domain, module, ORF, and gene cluster, and so can be used to prepare a narbomycin-related compound. 
     In one preferred embodiment, the starter domain of the narbonolide PKS is inactivated, i.e., by deletion, addition, or substitution of one or more codons in the recombinant DNA that encodes the PKS. In one preferred aspect, the starter domain is inactivated by site-specific mutagenesis to inactivate the active site. The resulting PKS can be used in host cells (optionally lacking an endogenous PKS) that are fed non-naturally occurring diketides to make non-naturally occurring oleandolides and narbomycin-like compounds. This technique is more generally described elsewhere. See U.S. Pat. No. 6,066,721, issued on May 23, 2000, and PCT patent publication No. 97/02358, each of which is incorporated herein by reference. 
     Mutations can be introduced to the nucleic acid compounds of the invention using conventional techniques. The substrates for mutation can be an entire PKS gene cluster, or can be nucleic acids that encode an ORF, a module, or a domain. Techniques for introducing mutations include preparing synthetic oligonucleotides including the mutations and inserting the mutated sequence into the appropriate vector using restriction endonuclease digestion. See, e.g., Kunkel, 1985 , Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA  82:448; Geisselsoder et al., 1987 , BioTechniques  5:786. 
     Alternatively, the mutations can be effected using a mismatched primer (generally 10-20 nucleotides in length) which hybridizes to the native nucleotide sequence (generally cDNA corresponding to the RNA sequence), at a temperature below the melting temperature of the mismatched duplex. The primer can be made specific by regulating primer length and base composition and by keeping the mutant base centrally located. See Zoller and Smith, 1983 , Methods in Enzymology  100:468. Primer extension is effected using DNA polymerase. The product of the extension reaction is cloned, and those clones containing the mutated DNA are selected. Selection can be accomplished using the mutant primer as a hybridization probe. The technique is also applicable for generating multiple point mutations. See, e.g., Dalbie-McFarland et al., 1982 , Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA  79:6409. One can also use PCR mutagenesis to effect the desired mutations. See U.S. Pat. No. 5,605,793. 
     Random mutagenesis of selected portions of nucleic acids encoding enzymatic activities can be accomplished by several different techniques. These techniques include inserting an oligonucleotide linker randomly into a plasmid, irradiating with X-rays or ultraviolet light, incorporating nucleotides during in vitro DNA synthesis, performing error-prone PCR mutagenesis, preparing synthetic mutants, and treating plasmid DNA in vitro with chemicals. Chemical mutagens include, for example, sodium bisulfite, nitrous acid, hydroxylamine, agents which damage or remove bases thereby preventing normal base-pairing such as hydrazine or formic acid, analogues of nucleotide precursors such as nitrosoguanidine, 5-bromouracil, 2-aminopurine, or acridine intercalating agents such as proflavine, acriflavine, quinacrine, and the like. Generally, plasmid DNA or DNA fragments are treated with chemicals, transformed into  E. coli  and propagated as a pool or library of mutant plasmids. 
     In another embodiment, the invention provides polyketides other than narbomycin by providing expression vectors that encode a chimeric PKS. The chimeric PKSs of the invention can be conceptually viewed as those substantially patterned on either the narbonolide PKS or a non-narbonolide PKS. In either case, the chimera includes one or more functional domains of the narbonolide PKS or a mutated version of such a domain. The invention also provides recombinant DNA vectors and host cells containing those vectors in which the chimeric PKS is produced together with one or more polyketide modification enzymes. Such enzymes can include, for example, a TE or its picolate-acid incorporating homologue, a rapP homologue, a methyltransferase, one or more sugar biosynthetic enzymes or transferases, a hydroxylase, or a P450 oxidase homologue. 
     With respect to chimeric PKS gene clusters, ORFs, and modules, preferred examples include construction of chimeric PKS enzymes wherein the erythromycin, FK-506, FK-520, narbomycin, oleandomycin, picromycin, rapamycin, spirarnycin, or tylosin PKS gene clusters function as accepting scaffolds or ORF, module, or domain donors. In this regard, the examples of erythromcyin PKS, rapamycin PKS, and tylosin PKS are preferred for constructing chimeric PKS gene clusters for production of polyketides with antibiotic activity. 
     Those of skill in the art will recognize that it is not necessary to replace an entire domain, module, or ORF of the target (scaffold) PKS with a corresponding segment of the narbonolide PKS. Rather peptide subsequences of a narbonolide PKS domain segment that correspond to a peptide subsequence in the scaffold PKS, or which otherwise provide useful function, can be used. In this context, the term “scaffold” defines the target PKS encoding DNA having one or more domain fragments, domains, modules, or ORFs that are being replaced, for example by a corresponding narbonolide PKS gene cluster segment. 
     Accordingly, appropriate nucleic acids, typically DNA, for construction of such chimeric PKS include those that encode at least 10, 15, 20, or more amino acids of a selected narbonolide PKS segment or domain. See, e.g., provisional U.S. patent application Ser. No. 60/091,526, filed Jul. 2, 1998, incorporated herein by reference. Of course, portions of, or all of, the desired coding sequences can be synthesized using standard solid phase synthesis methods, such as those described by Jaye et al., 1984 , J. Biol. Chem . 259:6331, and which are available commercially from, for example, Applied Biosystems, Inc. 
     Thus, the invention provides recombinant materials for the production of PKS genes or gene clusters, as well as “combinatorial” libraries of PKS expression vectors and the corresponding polyketides, wherein the term “combinatorial” reflects that the library encompasses a variety of different PKS gene clusters and corresponding polyketides. Of course, the methods of the invention may also be directed to the preparation of a single polyketide. The resulting polyketides may be further modified to convert them to compounds useful for a particular purpose, such as an antibiotic or an antifungal, for example. 
     Thus, in another aspect, the invention is directed to a multiplicity, or a library, of cells comprising PKS genes, wherein each different cell of the library contains an expression vector for the production of a different modular PKS. In a preferred embodiment, the different PKS are derived from the narbonolide PKS. In another preferred embodiment, the library of different modular PKS is obtained by modifying one or more domains or modules of a PKS ORF or gene cluster. The invention also provides methods to produce libraries of PKS complexes and libraries of polyketides by culturing these cells or by the use of cell-free extracts. See PCT patent publication No. 97/02358, incorporated herein by reference. 
     Each individual and unique colony in a library of the invention has the ability to produce a particular PKS synthase and ultimately a particular polyketide. Typically, there will be duplications in the colonies; the subset of the transformed colonies that contains a different PKS in each member colony can be considered the library. Alternatively, the expression vectors can be used individually to transform hosts, which transformed hosts are then assembled into a library. The number of different polyketides that are produced by the library is typically at least four, more typically at least ten, preferably at least 20, more preferably at least 50 or more, reflecting similar numbers of different altered PKS gene clusters and PKS gene products. The number of members in a library of the invention can be determined by the applications of the practitioner. The degrees of freedom are large, i.e., the variation of starter and extender units, stereochemistry, oxidation state, and chain length are attributes that can be varied. Thus, the present invention allows the construction of very large libraries based on the narbonolide PKS. 
     Colonies in the libraries of the invention produce the relevant PKS enzymes and can produce the relevant polyketides to obtain a library of polyketides. The polyketides secreted into the media can be screened for binding to desired targets, such as receptors, signaling proteins, and the like. The supernatants per se can be used for screening, or partial or complete purification of the polyketides can first be effected. Typically, such screening methods involve detecting the binding of each member of the library to receptor or other target ligand or exposure to a cell. Binding can be detected either directly or through a competition assay. Means to screen such libraries for binding are well known in the art. Alternatively, individual polyketide members of the library can be tested against a desired target. In this event, screens wherein the biological response of the target is measured are preferred. 
     Those of skill in the art will recognize that, in providing libraries of PKS gene clusters, the invention also provides each individual PKS gene cluster in the library. In one embodiment, these members each comprise a polyketide synthase gene cluster derived from a naturally occurring PKS. In another embodiment, each member contains at least two functional PKS modules, and one or both of these modules contains mutations, deletions, or replacements of one or more of the activities of the naturally occurring module. In another embodiment, each member produces a polyketide not found in nature. 
     Particularly preferred embodiments of the invention include those recombinant PKS enzymes and PKS modules, ORFs, and gene clusters in which a KS, AT, ACP, KR, DH or ER has been either deleted or deleted and replaced. If replaced, the activity or domain can be replaced by a version of the activity from a different PKS or from another module within the same PKS gene cluster. Also preferred are derivatives where at least one non-condensation cycle enzymatic activity (KR, DH or ER) has been deleted or wherein any of these activities has been mutated so as to change the polyketide produced from the PKS. In another embodiment, the domain or module of one PKS, such as from erythromycin, rapamycin, or tylosin is replaced with that of a narbonolide PKS domain or module. Such methods are applicable also to fragments of domains, such as those encoding an active site. 
     In constructing a recombinant chimeric PKS module, ORF, or gene cluster of the invention, a variety of embodiments are provided. In one embodiment, one can select the polyketide chain length by selecting the appropriate number of modules in the PKS gene cluster. In another, one can determine the nature of the carbon skeleton of the polyketide by selecting the specificities of the acyl transferases that determine the nature of the extender units at each position—e.g., malonyl, methyl malonyl, ethyl malonyl, and the like. In another, one can select the appropriate loading domain specificity to effect the desired carbon skeleton of the polyketide. In another, one can select the oxidation state at various positions of the polyketide by selecting the appropriate, if any, dehydratase and reductase domains of the modules to determine the presence and location of ketone, alcohol, alkene or alkane substituents at particular locations in the polyketide. In yet another embodiment, one can select the stereochemistry of the resulting polyketide by selecting the AT/KS specificity (as when there is no reductive cycle or the reductive cycles consists of only a ketoreductase); by selecting the ketoreductase to determine the chirality of any alcohol; and by selecting the enoyl reductase specificity. 
     Thus, the invention provides methods for constructing PKS modules, ORFs, and gene clusters by deleting or inactivating domains or modules, inserting domains or modules the same or different PKS systems, or by otherwise mutating such compounds using standard procedures for obtaining genetic alterations. Thus, to obtain nucleic acids encoding a variety of derivatives of a PKS gene cluster, and thus a variety of polyketides, as in the construction of a library, a desired number of constructs can be obtained by “mixing and matching” PKS domains, modules, and ORFs. If replacement of a particular target region in a host PKS gene cluster, ORF, or module is to be made, this replacement can be conducted in vitro using suitable restriction enzymes. This replacement can be effected in vivo using recombinant techniques involving homologous segments of nucleic acid framing the replacement gene in a donor plasmid and a receptor region in a recipient plasmid. Such systems, advantageously involving plasmids of differing temperature sensitivities, are described, for example, in U.S. Pat. Nos. 5,712,416 and 5,672,491, incorporated herein by reference. 
     Thus, the invention provides useful reagents and methods for the production of polyketides. In one aspect, the invention provides recombinant vectors encoding the complete PKS gene cluster and associated modification enzymes for the polyketide narbomycin. In another embodiment, the KS domain of the PKS is inactivated, preferably by site-specific mutagenesis of the corresponding coding sequence, and non-natural activated diketides are fed a strain harboring the mutant PKS (in the chromosome or in an extrachromasomally replicating vector) to produced a desired compound. This technique is more fully described in PCT patent application No. US98/14911 and U.S. Pat. No. 6,066,721, issued on May 23, 2000, both of which are incorporated herein by reference. 
     In another aspect, the invention provides nucleic acids that encode the various domains, including the KS, AT, ACP, KR, DH, ER, and TE domains of the loading and all six extender modules of the narbomycin gene cluster. In another aspect, the invention provides nucleic acids that encode the modification enzymes that encode the activities that modify the narbomycin polyketide. In particular, the present invention provides in recombinant form the desosamine biosynthetic and transferase enzyme. In another aspect, the invention provides mutated versions of the foregoing that differ from their unmutated counterparts in activity or specificity. In another aspect, the invention provides chimeric PKS modules, ORFs, and gene clusters comprising one or more domains of the narbonolide PKS (or a mutant form thereof) and one or more domains of a non-narbonolide PKS. Further, the invention provides host cells comprising such vectors, methods of culturing host cells to produce the recombinant PKS of the invention as well as the polyketides produced by those PKS, and a variety of novel polyketides. 
     EXAMPLE 1 
     Narbonolide PKS Sequence 
     To facilitate the construction of the nucleic acids of the invention, cosmids pKOSO37-23, pKOSO37-25, and pKOSO37-26 of the invention have been subjected to DNA sequence analysis. The SuperCos™ vectors (Stratagene) from which these cosmids were derived comprise sequencing sites called T3 and T7 that facilitate sequencing. 
     Each sequence is preceded by a contig number. This number is also shown on FIG. 2 below the region of the insert DNA in cosmid pKOSO37-26 from which the sequence is obtained. Contig 143 is composed of two sequences, designated 143a and 143b, below. 
     Contig 143a (SEQ ID NO:1) 
     ACAGGGGATATCCCGCTCCAGGCGAACGGTAGCCGCGTGCCCTCGCCGAACGCCCCGCCCGCACC GGCCGCCTGCACGGCGGCGTCGAGCAGCGCCGGGTGGAGGCCGAACCGCGCGCCCTCGGCGCCCG CGACCTCCGTCGGCAGGGCCACGTCGGCGAACACCTCTTCGCCGCGCCGCCAGACGCCACGGACG CCCCGGAAGAGGGGCCCGTAGCCGTATCCGCTCGCCGCGAAGCGGTCGTACAGACCGTCCACGTC CACTGCTTCGGCACCCGCCGGGGGCCAGGCCTCCGGGTCGGCGACAGGGGCGGTGCGATCCGTAC GGGCGAGCACACCGGTCGCGTGCCGCGTCCACTCCGGCTCGCCCGGCGCGTCCTCCGGGTGCGCG TGGAGCACGAAGGTACGGCGCCCGGACTCGTCGCTCGCGCCGACGGACAGCTGCACGCGGACCGC GCCGCGACGGGGCAGGACGAGCGGGGCGTCGAGGGTGAGCTCCTCGACCAGATCGCAGCCGACCT GGTCACCGGCCCGGAAGGCCAGCTCCACGAACGCCGTTCCCGGCAGCAGCACCGTGCCGGCCACC GCGTGGTCCGCCAGCCAGGGGTGCGTACGGAGGGAGAGGCTCCCCGTGAGCAGGCAGCCGTCGGA GTCGGCGAGCGCGACGGCCGCGCCGAGCAGCGGGTGCTCGGCCGCCCCGAGACCGGCGGACGTGA TGTCACCGACGGCGGAGTGCTCGGGCCGCGGCCAGTAGCGCTCGGTCTGGAAGGCGTAGGTGGGG AGGTCGGGGAGGTCGGCGTTCGTCGCGTTCTTCGTGGTCGTGGTGGGGAGGACGGGTGTCCAGTC GAGGGGGAGGCCGTTGGTCCAGGCCTCGGCGAGCGAGGTGACCAGACGCTCCTGGCCGCCGTCCT CGCGGCGGAGGGTGCCGAGGCCGGTGACGGTGTCGGGGAGGGCCATGGTGAGGACGGGGTGGGCG CTGACCTCGACGAAGTGGGTGAACCCTTCGTCGGTGGCGAGGGTTTCGACGGCGGGGGCGAAGCC GACGGGGTGGCGGAGGTTGCGGTACCAGTACGTGGCGTCGAGGGCGGGTTCGGTGATCCAGGCAC CGTCGAGCGTGGAGAAGAAGGGGACGCGCGGAGCGTGCGGGGTGAGTCCGGCGAGGACGTCGGCG AGCTCGTTCTCGATGGTCTCGACGTGGGCGCTGTGGGAGGCGTAGTCGACGGGGATGATCCGCGC GCGGATGCCGTCGGCCTTGCAGGTCTTCGCGAGCTCTTCGATCTGTGCGGGGTCGCCGGAGACCA CGGTGGCGGTGGGGCCGTTGACGGCGGCGATCGACAGTCCGTCGAGGGTGTCGATCCGCTCCAGG ACGTCGGCCTGGCTGAGGGCGAGGGAGACCATGCCGCCCCTGCCGGCGAGGTGAGCGGCGATGGA CCGGCTGCGTAGGGCGACGACGCGGGCGGCATCCTCCAGGCTCAGTGCCCCGGCGACGTACGCGG CGGCGATCTCGCCCTGGGAGTGGCCGATGACGGCCTGGGGGGTGATGCCGTGGTGCTGCCAGATC TTCGCGAGGGAGACCATGACGGCGAAGGTG 
     Contig 143b (SEQ ID NO:2) 
     CGGGCTGGACGACGTCGACGCGGTCGAGCGTCGGGGCGCCGGGAGCCTGTCGTACGACGGCTTCG AGGGACCAGTCGACGTGACGGGAGAGCGCGGTCTCGCACGCGGCCATCTCCGCCGCGAACTCCGC AGAGGAGTCCAGCAGTTCGGCACCCATCCCGGACCACTGCGTGCCCTGGCCGGGGAACACGAACG CCACGCGCCCGACAGCGGAAGCCGTGCCACGAATCAGCCCGTCCGGGTCGGCCAGGGCCTGTACG AGGTCGCCCGCCCCGGTGCCCAGCGCGACGGCCCGGTGCTCGAACTGCGCCCGCCCGTCGGCCAG TACGCGGGCGACGGCGCCGGCGTCGACGTCATCCGTACGCCCCTGAGAGGCGTACGCGGCGAGCC GCTCGATCTGGGCGTCGAGTGCACCGGCGGACTTCGCCGACACCACCCACGGCACCACGCCACCC GACGACGGCTCGTCCACGGCGGTGTTTTCCACCGTCGGGGCCTCTTCGAGGACGACGTGAGCGTT CGTCCCGCTGATGCCGAAGGAGGAGACGGCGGCGCGGCGCAGCCCGCCGTCCTGCTTCTCCGGCC AGTCCACGGCCTCGGTGAGGAGTTCCACGGCACCGGCCGACCAGTCGATCTGGTCCGAGGGGGCG TCCACGTGAAGCGTCTTCGGGAGTAGCCCGTGGCGCATCGCCTGGACCATCTTGATGACACCGGC GACACCGGCCGCGGCCTGGGTGTGCCCGATGTTGGACTTCAACGATCCGAGCAGCAACGGACGTT CGCCGCCCCGGTCCTGCCCGTAGGTGGCGATCAGGGCCTGCGCCTCGATCGGGTCGCCGAGCCGC GTCCCCGTGCCGTGCGCCTCGACGACATCGACCTCGCCCGGCGTGAGCCGGGCGTCGGCCAGGGC CCGCCGGATGACGCGCTGCTGCGACGGCCCGTTCGGAGCCGTGAGACCGTTGCTGGCGCCGTCCT GGTTCACGGCGCTGCCGCGGACGACCGCGAGGACCCGGTGTCCGTGGCGGCGGGCGTCCGACAGG CGCTCGACGAGGAGGACACCGACACCCTCGGACCAACTGGTGCCGTCCGCCGACGCGGCGAACGC CTTCGACCGACCGTCCCCGGCCAGCCCGCGCTGCCGGCTGAACTCCACGAACATCCCCGGCGTGG GCATCACGGCCACGCCGCCGGCGAGCGCCATGTCGACCTCGCCCTTGCGCAGGGCCTGCACGGCG AGGTGCAGGGCGACCAGCGACGACGAGCAGGCGGTGTCCACCGTCAGGGCGGGGCCCTCAAGGCC GAGCGTGTACGAGACGCGGCCCGACATCACGCTGGCCGTGTTGCCGGTCAGCAGGTATCCGTCGA GGCCCTCCCCGCCGTCGCGCAGGCTCGGCCCGTACTCGTGGGTCATCGCCCCGG 
     Contig 132 (SEQ ID NO:3) 
     GAACCCGTCGGCGTCCGCCGAGAAGGCCTTGCTCCGGCCGTCCGGGGCGAGCGCCCGCTGCCGGC TGAACTCCACGAACATGTGCGGGGTCGCCATCATCGCCACACCACCGGCGAGTGCCATCGAGCAT TCACCGCTCCGCAGCGCCCGCACCGCCAGGTGCAGGGCGGTCAGCGAGGACGAGCAGGCGGTGTC GACGGTCGTCGCGGGCCCTTCGAGACCGAAGGTGTACGCGATGCGGCCGGACGCGACGCTCGGCG TGCTGCCGGTCAGCAGGTAACCCTCCACGCCGCGCGGGGCGTTCGGGACGCGGGCCGCGTAGTCC TGGTAGGAGAGGCCGATGAAGACACCGGTGCTGCTGCCGCGCAGCGAGCCCGGCTCGATGCCGGC CCGCTCGAACGCCTCCCAGGACGTCGCCAGGAGCATCCGCTGCTGCGGGTCCATGGCGAGCGCCT CGCGCGGCGAGACACCGAAGAACTCCGCGTCGAACTCGGCCGCGTCGTGCAGGAACCCGCCCTCG CGGACGTACGCCTTGCCGAGCGCGTCCGGGTCGGCGTCGTACAGGCCGTCGAGGTCCCAGCCCCG GTCGGTGGGGAAGGGCGTGATGCCCTCGCCGCCCTCGGCCAGCATCCGCCACAGGTCCTCAGGGC TGCGGATGCCACCGGGGTATCGGCAGCTCATGGCGACGATCGCGATCGGATCGTCGTCGACACCG AGACCGACACCGAGACCGAGACCGACACCGAGACCGACACCGGATCCGCCACCGACACCGGATCC GCCACCGAGACCAGCACCAGCTCCGCCACCGAGACCAGCACCAGCTCCGGCACCGAGACCAGCGC CGACAGCCCGCGTCCCCCTGGCCCACGTGGACTCCGCCGCCGCGTCCTCGTCACCGAGGAACTCG GCACGGAGCAGTGACGCGAGGGCCAGCGGCGTCGGGTGGTCGAAGACGAGCGTCGCGGGCAAGGG GAGCCCGGTCGCCCGGGTCAGCCGGTTGCGGAGCTCGACTCCGGCGAGCGAGTCGAAGCCGATGT CCTTGAAGGCCCGGTCGGCGGCGACGTCCTCAGGTGAACGCATCCGGAGCACGGCGGCGGCCTGG GCCCGTACGAGACCGAGGAGGATCTCCGTACGCTCGCCGGGAGCCGCGGCGGCCAGCCGCTCGGC CAGCGGGTTCCCGCCCGCGGCGGAGCTGCCGCCCGGCCCGGCCGGGGCGCTCTCCCGCGCGTCGA TGATGCGCCGCACCTCGGGCAGCTCCTCGACGAGGGGCTGAGGGCGGCCGGAGGAGTACGCGAGG TAGAAACGGTCCCAGTCGATGTCCGCGACGGTGATCGCGGTCTCGTCCCGGCCGAGGGCGGACTC CAGTGCGGTCAGGGCGAGTTCCGGGTCCATGCCGGGTACGCCGTGATCGCGCAGGCGCTCGGCCA CCCC 
     Contig 116 (SEQ ID NO:4) 
     AGCGGGCCAGGCCGGAGCCGGGGACCGGGACCGGGACGTGTCCACGCCGTCCAGGAGCACCGCCC ACACGGATGCCCTGCTGGCACAACTCACCAGGCTGGAAGGCGCCTTGGTGCTGACGGGCCTCCCG GGCGCCCCCGGGAGCGAAGAAGTCCTGGAGCACCTGCGCTCCCTTCGCGCGATGGTCACGGGCGA GACCGGGAGCGGGACCGGGGCCGGAAGCGGGGGCGGGGGCGCGTCCGCGGAATCCGGGGGCGGAG ACCCCTACTACGCCGACGGGGGCGGGAGTGAGGACCGCGCGGGAGTGCCGGACTTCATGAACGCC TCGGCCGAGGAACTCTTCGGCCTCCTCGACATGGACCCCAGCACGGACTGATCCCTGCCGCACGG CCGCCTCCCGCCCCGGGCCCCGTCCGAGACCCCGTCCCGGACCCGTCCCGGGCACCTCGACTCGA ATCACTTCATGCGCGCCTCGGGCGCCTCCAGGAACTCAAGGGGACAGCGTGTCCACGGTGAACGA AGAGAAGTACCTCGACTACCTGCGTCGCGCCACGGCGGACCTCCACGAGGCCCGCGGCCGCCTCC GCGAGCTGGAGGCCAGGGCGGGCGAGCCGGTGGCGATCGTCGGCATGGCCTGCCGCCTGCCGGGC GGTGTCGCCTCGCCGGAGGACCTGTGGCGGCTTGTGGCCGGTGGCGAGGACGCGATCTCGGAGTT CCCGCAGGACCGCGGCTGGGACGTGGAGGGGCTGTACGACCCGAACCCGGAGGCCACGGGCAGGA GTTACGCCCGTGAGGCCGGATTCCTGTACGAGGCGGGCGAGTTCGACGCCGACTTCTTCGGGATC TCGCCGCGCGAGGCCCTCGCCATGGACCCGCAGCAGCGGCTCCTCCTGGAGGCCTCCTGGGAGGC GTTCGAGCACGCCGGCATCCCGGCGGCCAGTGCGCGCGGCACGTCGGTCGGCGTCTTCACCGGCG TGATGTACCACGACTACGCGACCCGTCTCACCGACGTCCCCGAGGGCATCGAGGGCTACCTGGGC ACCGGGAACTCCGGCAGCGTCGCCTCGGGCCGGGTCGCCTACACGCTGGGCCTGGAGGGCCCGGC CGTCACGGTCGACACGGCCTGCTCGTCCTCGCTCGTCGCCCTGCACCTCGCCGTGCAGGCCCTGC GCAAGGGCGAGGTCGACATGGCGCTCGCCGGCGGCGTGACGGTCATGTCGACTCCCAGCACCTTC GTCGAGTTCAGCCGCCAGCGCGGACTGGCCCCCGACGGCCGGTCGAAGTCCTTCTCGTCGACGGC GGACGGCACCAGCTGGTCCGAGGGCGTCGGCGTCCTCCTCGTCGAGCGCCTGTCGGACGCCCGTC GCAAGGGCCACCGGGTGCTCGCCGTGGTCCGGGGCACGGCCGTCAACCAGGACGGCGCGAGCAGC GGCCTCACCGCCCCGAACGGCCCGTCTCAGCA 
     Contig 109 (SEQ ID NO:5) 
     GGTGCTCCAGGGCGGCGACCCTGCCCATGCCCCACACCATGGCCTGGGCGGGGGAGGAGATGTGG TCGGCGCGGCCGACGGACACCGCGCCACGGGTGACGCACCACAGCGGAGCGGCGACACCGGCGTC CTCCAGCGCCTGCACCAGGGTGAGGGTGGCGCCGGTGCCCCGGGTGAAGGGGGCGGGGTGGCCGG GGTGCGCGTCCTCGTCCCAGGCGAGCAGCGAGACGACACCGCCGACGGCTCCACCGGCCGCCGCC AGGGCTTCGCCCAGCGCCTCCGTGAGCCGCTGCCGGTCGCTCGGTGCGGACACGTCCAGCCGTAC GGGGTCGGCGCCCGCACCGGACAGCGCGGCGAGCACCGGGGCGGCCTCGGAGGACCGGCCCTCGG GGGCGACGACGAGCCAGCGACCGGACAGGCCGGGGCTCTCGGTGCCCTCGGCGACCGCGAGCCGC TTCCAGTCGACGCGGTAGCGCCAGGAGTCCTGCACGGAGCCCTGGGCGGCGGGGGAGTCGTGGAG CCAGTAGTGACGGCGCTGGAAGGCGTAGGTGGGGAGGTCGGGGAGGTCGCCGGTCGCGGCCGGGA GGACGGGCGCCCAGTCGACGGTGAGGCCGTGGGCCCAGGCTTCGGCGAGGGAGGTGATCAGGCGG TCGAGGCCGCCTTGTTCGCGGCGGAGGGTGCTGAGGCCTGTGACGGTGTCGGGGAGGGCCATGGT GAGGACGGGGTGGGCGGAGACCTCGATGAAGTGGGTGAAGCCTTCGGTTGTGGCGAGGGTTTCGA TGGCGGGGGCGAAGCCGACGGGGTGGCGGAGGTTGCGGTACCAGTAGGTGGCGTCGAGGGCGGGT TCGGTGATCCAGGTGCCTTCGAGGGTGGAGAAGAAGGGGACGCGCGGAGCGTGCGGGGTGAGTCC GGTGAGGACGTCGGCGAGCTCGTTCTCGATGGTCTCGACGTGGGCGCTGTGGGAGGCGTAGTCGA CGGGGATGACCCGCGCGCGGACCCCGTCCGCCTTGCACGTACGGGCGAGCTCCTCGATCTGTGCG GGGTCGCCCGAAACGACGGTGGCGGTGGGCCCGTTGAGGGCGGCGACGGACAGCCCGTCGAGGTT CTGGATCCGCTCCAGGACGTCGGTCTGGCTGAGGGCGAGGGAGATCATGCCGCCCTTGCCGGCGA GGTGAGCGGCGATGGACCGGCTGCGTAGGGCGACGACGCGGGCGGCATCCTCCAGGCTCAGTGCC CCGGCGACGTACGCGGCGGCGATCTCGCCTTGCGAGTGCCCGATGACGGCCTGCGGGGTCACGCC GTGGTGCTGCCAGAGCTTGGCCAGCGAGACCATGACGGCGAAGGTGACGGGCTGCACCACATCGA CGCGGTCGAGCGTGGGGGCGCCGGGTGTCTGCCGGACGACGGCCTCCAGTGACCAGTCCACATAC GGCGCGAGCGCGGCCTCGCACTCGGCCATCGTCTCCGCGAACTCCTTCGACGTGTCGAGGAGTTC GGCTCCCATTCCGGCCCACTGCGTGCCCTGGCCGGGGAAGACGAACGCCACCCGGCCCACGTCCG TGGACGTTCCCCGTATCAGCCCTTCCGGAGCGGTCAGCGCCTGTGCGAAGTCGCCCGTCCCGGTG CCGATCGCGACGGCCCGGTGCTCGAACTGCGCGCGCCCGTCGGCCAGTACGCGGGCGACGGCGCC GGCGTCGACGTCATCCGTACCGCCCTGCGAGGCGTACGCGGCGAGGCGCCCGATCTGGGCGTCCA GCGCGGCCGGAGACTTCGCCGAGACCAGCCACGGCACCAGGCCGCCGGCGGACGGCTCGACGGCC GGGGTCTCGTTTGTCAGGGTCTCGTCCGCCGGGGTCTCGACGACCCCCGGGGCCTCTTCGA 
     Contig 95 (SEQ ID NO:6) 
     GGCCCGGCGGCCCTGGACCTCATGGCCACCGTCCTCGCCGGCGGTACCGGTGAGGACCAGGTCGC CGTGCGCGCCTCCGGGCTGCTCGCCCGCCGCCTCGTCCGCGCCGCCCTCCCCGCTCACGGGACGG CTTCGCCGTGGTGGCAGGCCGACGGCACGGTGCTCGTCACCGGTGCCGACGAGCCGGCCGCCGCC GAGGCCGCGCGCCGCCTGGCCCGCGACGGCGCCGGACACCTCCTCCTCCACACCGGCCCCGTGGC GGGTACGGAGGACTCCGACCCCACCGACCCCACCGACCCCACCGACCCCACCGGCCTCACCGGCC TCGTCGCCGAGCTCGCCGACCTCGGCGCGACGGCCACCGTCGTGTCCTGCGACCTCACGGACCGG GAGGCGGCCGCCCGGCTGCTCGCCGGCGTCTCCGACGAGCACCCGCTCAGCGCCGTCCTCCACCT GCCGCCCACCGTCGACTCCGAGCCGCTCGCCGCCACCGACCCGGACGCACTCGCCCGCGTCGTAA CCGCGAAGGCCACCGCCGCGCTGCACCTGGACAGCCTGCTGCGGGAGTCCGCGGCGGCCGGACGC CGTGCACCCGTCCTCGTCCTCTTCTCCTCGGTCGCCGCGACCTGGGGCGGCGCCGGACAGGGCGC GTACGCCGCCGGTACGGCCTTCCTCGACGCCCTCGCCGGTCAGCACCGTGCCGAAGGGCCCACCG TGACCTCCGTGGCCTGGAGCCCCTGGGAGGGCAGCCGCGTCACCGAGGGCGCGACCGGGGAGCGG CTGCGCCGCCTCGGCCTGCGCCCCCTCGCTCCCGCGACGGCGCTCACCGCCCTGGACACCGCACT CGGCCACGGCGACACGGCCGTCACGATCGCCGACGTCGACTGGTCGAGCTTC 
     Contig 115 (SEQ ID NO:7) 
     ACGTGGGAACACGTCCTGCGTCCCAAGGTCGACGCGGCGTTCCTCCTCGACGAGCTGACCTCCAC ACCCGCCCACGACCTGGCCGCGTTCGTCATGTTCTCCTCCGCCGCCGCCGTCTTCGGCGGCGCGG GGCAGGGCGCATACGCCGCCGCCAACGCCACCCTCGACGCCCTCGCCTGGCGCCGCCGCGCCGCC GGACTCCCCGCCCTCTCCCTCGGCTGGGGCCTCTGGGCAGAGAACAGCAGCATGACCGGCGGACT GAGCGACACCGACCGCTCGCGGCTGGCTCGTTCCGGGGCGACGCCCATGGACAGCGAGGTGACCC TGTCCCTCCTGGACGCGGCCATGCGCCGCGACGACCCGGCGCTCGTCCCGATCGCCCTGGACGTC GCCGCGCTCCGGGCCCAGGAGCGCGACGGCATGCTGGCGCCGCTGCTCAGCGGGCTCACCCGCGG GTCGCGGGCCGGCGGCGCTCCGGTCGGCCGCCGCAGGGCCGCCGCCGACGGCACCGGCCAGGCGG AGAGGGACCTGGGCGGGCGGCTCGCCGCGATGACCCCGGACGACAGGACCGCGCACCTGCGGGAC CTCGTCCGTACGCACGTGGCGACCGTCCTGGGACACGGCGCCCCGAGCCGGGTCGACCTGGAGCG CGCCTTCCGCGACACCGGTTTCGACTCCCTCACCGCCGTCGAGCTCCGCAACCGCCTCAACGCCG CCACCGGGCTGCGCCTCCCGGCCACGCTCGTCTTCGACCACCCCACTCCGGGGGAGCTCGCCGGG CACCTGCTCGACGAACTCGCCGCCGCCGCAGGCGGGTCCTGGGCGGATGACACCGGGTCCGGCTC TGCTTCCGGCTCCGGCTCCGGCTCCGGAGGCGCGGTCTCGGCTGCGGACCGGCAGACCGCGGCGG CACTCGCCGAGCTCGACCGGCTGGAAGGCGTACTCGCCGCCCTCGCGCCCGCCGCCGGCGGCCGT CCGGAGCTCGCCGCCCGGCTCAGGGCGCTGGCCGCGGCCCTGGGGGACGACGGCGGCGCCGCCAC CGAACTGGACGAGGCGTCCGACGACGACCTCTTCTCCTTCATCGACAAGGAGCTGGGCGAATCCG ACTTCTGACCTGACCTGACCCGACCCGACCGGCGCGACAAGCGACATCAGCACCAGCACCAGCAC CACCCAGCCCCCACACACACGGAACGGACAGGCGAGAACGGGAGCCATGGCGAACAACGAAGACA AGCTCCGCGACTACCTCAAGCGCGTTACCGCCGAGCTGCAGCAGAACACCCGGCGTCTGCGCGAG ATCGAGGGACGCACGCACGAGCCGGTGGCGATCGTGGGCATGGCCTGCCGCCTGCCGGGCGGTGT CGCCTCGCCCGAGGACCTGTGGCAGCTGGTGGCCGGGGACGGCGACGCGATCTCGGAGTTCCCGC AGGACCGCGGCTGGGACGTGGAGGGGCTGTACGACCCGGACCCGGACGCGTCCGGGCGTACGTAC TGCCGGTCCGGCGGGTTCCTCCACGACGCGGGCGAGTTCGACGCCGACTTCTTCGGGATCTCGCC GCGCGAGGCCCTCGCCATGGACCCGCAGCAGCGGCTGTCCCTCACCACCGCGTGGGAGGCGATCG AGCACGCGGGCATCGACCCGACGAGCCTGAAGGGCAGCGGCCTCGGCGTCTTCGTC 
     Contig 98 (SEQ ID NO:8) 
     GAGCCCGAGCCGGTGCCCGGCGGCCCGGGCAGCGTCGCCGCCGGCCCCGCCGCGGATCCGGAACC GGAGACGTCGATCGACGACCTCGACGCCGAGGCCCTGATCCGGATGGCTCTCGGCCCGCGGAACG CCTGAGCACCCGCCCCGGCCCGTGGCTGCCCCGGCCCTTGCCCGACTGCGGGCCGGGCCCCGGGC CCGCACACCGCCACGTACCACCCCGCACCACCGCCCCCCACACGCCCACAACGCCATCCACGAGC GGAAGACCACACCCAGATGACGAGTTCCAACGAGCAGTTGGTGGACGCTCTGCGCGCCTCCCTCA AGGAGAACGAAGAACTCCGGAAAGAGAGCCGTCGCCGGGACGACCGGCGGCAGGAGCCCATGGCG ATCGTCGGCATGAGCTGTCGGTTCGCGGGCGGCATCCAGTCCCCCGAGGACCTCTGGGACGCGGT GGCCGCCGGCAAGGACCTCGTATCCGACGTACCTGAGGAGCGCGGCTGGGACTTCGACTCCCTGT ACGACCCGGAGCCCGGGCGGAAGGGCACGACGTACGTCCGCAACGCCGCGTTCCTCGACGACGCC GCCGGCTTCGACGCCGCGTTCTTCGGGATCTCGCCGCGCGAGGCCCTCGCCATGGACCCGCAGCA GCGGCAGCTCCTCGAAGCCTCCTGGGAGGTCTTCGAGCGGGCCGGCATCGACCCCGCGTCGGTGC GCGGCACCGATGTCGGCGTGTACGTGGGATGCGGCTACCAGGACTACGCGCCGGACATCCGGGTC GCCCCCGAGGGGACCGACGGTTACGTCGTCACCGGCAACTCATCCGCCGTGGCCTCCGGGCGCAT CGCGTACTCCCTCGGTCTCGAGGGGCC 
     Contig 184 (SEQ ID NO:9) 
     GCTCGGCGAACTCCCCGCGCCGACCCGCCGGCACACCGAGCACCGCGGCCGCCGCGCCCGTCACC GCCGGACGGACGAAACCCCCCACCAACTCGAAGGCGTACGAAGCCGACGGGTCCGGCGCGAGACC CTCCAGGATCTGCCGGTGGACCTCCTCGACCACGGCCCGGCGCTGCCCCGCCCACGCCCCCGGCA CCTCGGCGGCCGCCCGCGGCGCCTGCTCGTGCTCCAGCGGGCAGCCCTCCCCGTAGGAGAGGACC TGCTGCGGCACCGGGACGCCGTGGCACCCGGCACCCCGAACTCCGTCGAGCACAGGACGCTCGCC GCCACGGCGTGATCGGCGGTGACCCAGCTGCCCGTCGGGCTGAAGGAGAGCACGCCCCGGGCGCG CACCCGCTCGTACGCGGGATACGGATCGTCGGCCTGCCCGCGCAGCACGGCGGCGTACGGGTCGC CGTTCGCGGCGTGGATCCAGTGGATGCCGCGGGTCTCCAGGAGGTGGGCACCGAGCTCGGGGTCG GCCACCGCGCTGACGGTGCGGCCCAGCGGAGGCTGCGTGAGCGCCCGCGCCGGGTCGTCGGTCAC CGTGGGTTCTGCCATCGTTTCGCCGCTCCTTCGATCAGTCGGGTCGGGGGCTGCACGACGCGGGA ATCGGGCGCGCCGCGGGTGACGAGCAGGTGGTCGGAGATGTCGTTGCAGATCCCGTGCCACTGGT CGTTGAGGTAGAAGTGACCGCCGGAGTACGCCCGCAGGCAGAACGGCCCGCTGGTGTGCCGGCGC CACTCGGCCACCTCGTTCAGCGGCGCCTTCGGGTCGCGGTCGCCGGCCACGGCCATCACCGGGCA GGCGAGCTTCGCGGAGGGCCGGTGCTCGTACGTCTCCGCCGCCTTGTAGTCGCTGCGCAGCGCGG GCAGCACCAGCCGCATCAGCTCGTCGTCCTGGAGGAACCGCTCGTCCGTGCCGCTGAGCTGCCGG ATCTCGGCCAGGAACGCCCGGTCGTCCAGCTGGTGGACGAGCCGGTCCGGTGCCAGGGACGGGGC GCGCCGGCCGGAGACGTACAGGCCCTCGGGCCGTACCCCGTGCCGCTGTTCGAGGATGCGGGCCG CCTCGTA 
     Contig 88 (SEQ ID NO:10) 
     GGGGACGATCCCCGCCGGGGTGGGGTCGCGATGGGTCTCCTCGCGCAGCCGGTGCGCGGCGGCGA GGACCGAGGGGTCGTCGAGGATGCGGACGACCGCGTCCCGCACCGCCTGCGGGGTGAGGCCGGCA GGCGGCAGGAAGAACCCCGCCCCCTGCTCCGCGACGGCCCGCGCCTTGACCGGCGCGTCCCACAG CTCGGCGAGCATGACCTGCGGCACCGCGTTGATCACGGCGGTCGCGTACGTACCGGCCCCGCCGT GGTGGACGATCGCCGAACAGCTCGGCAGCAGCGCGTGCATCGGCACGAAGTCCGTGAACCGCGTG TGCTTCGGATAGGAGCGGATCTCCGCGCGCTGACCCGCGTCGAGCGTGGCCACGAGCTCGATGTC GAGGTCGGCGAGCGCCTCCAGGATGTCGGCCTGCGAGACCCCGTCGCCGCCGAGGACCTCCCGCG CGGAGACACCGAGAGTGAGGCAGACCCGGGGCCGCGCCGGCGGCTCGGCGAGCCAGTCCGGCACG ACCGACGTGCCGTTGTACGGAACGTACTGCACCCCGACGGTCGGCAGACCCGTGTCGAGACGCAG ACTCGGCGGAGTCGGGTCGACCGTGAACTGGCCGGTGAGCAGCTCCTCTTCGAAGGAGGCGCCGA ACCGGTCCAGCGTCCACGTCAGCCACTCCGCCGTGGGGTCCTCACGGTGCTCCGGCGGCTGCCGG TCCCGCAGCGCGACGAACTTGCGGCGGGCGCTCCCCATCACGTCGGGCCCCCACAGGACCCGGGC GTGCGCGGCGCCCGTGACCTGGGCGGCGACGGCGCCCGCGTACGTCGTCGGCTCCCACAGCACCA GGTCCGGCTGCCAGGACCTGGCGAAGCCGACCAGGTCGTCGATCATCGAGTCGTTGTTGGCGAGC AGATAGAAGTACGGGGCGAGGATCGCGTCGATGCCGAGGGCGTGGTCCCAGTCCAGCGGCTCGCT ACGGGCCTCGTCGAAGGCGATCGCCGGATGGTTCGGGCGCGGCTCGCCCGCCATCCGCACCCGGT ACTCGTGGATGAGGTGATCCGTGCCGACGGGCACGGCCGCGAGCCCTGACCCGGTGATGGTGTCC GTGAGCGCGGGCTGGCTCGCGACCCGCACCTCGTGCCCGGCGGCGAGCAGCGCCCAGGCCAGGGG AACGAGGCCGTAGTAGTGCGTGTGATGTGCGAACGAGGTCAGCAGGACGCGCATGGCGTCGTGTC CTTCCTTGCCGGTGAAGGGTCGGGGTGGGGAGGCGGGGTGGGGAGGTCGGAACGGACTCAGGAGC CGACCGGGACGCTCAGCGGCCCGCGGCCGACAGGGGCGCGGCGGGGACGGAGCACGGGCCCGGCC TTCCGCAGCCCGGGGAAACGCCCGGCCAGGGTCCGCAGCGCGACCTCCGCCTGGAGCCGCACCAG CGACGCCACCGGGCCGTACGGACCGGCGGGGTGCAGCGCGAGGTGCGCCGTGGCGTCGGGGCGCG CGAGGTCGAAACGCTCCGGGTCCGTGAAGACCCCCGGGTCCCGGCCGGTGCCGGCGGTGAGGACG ACGACATGCGCCCCGGCCGGGAGACGCCGGCCCGCCAGCT 
     Contig 93 (SEQ ID NO:11) 
     GCAGGAGTCCCGTGTACGAAGTCGACCACGCCGACGTCTACGACCTCTTCTACCTCGGTCGCGGC AAGGACTACGCCGCCGAGGCCTCCGACATCGCCGACCTGGTGCGGACCCGTACCCCCGAGGCCTC CTCGCTCCTGGACGTGGCCTGCGGTACGGGCACGCATCTGGAGCACTTCACCAAGGAGTTCGGCG ACACCGCCGGCCTGGAGCTGTCCGAGGACATGCTGACCCACGCCCGGAAGCGGCTGCCCGACGCG ACGCTCCACCAGGGCGACATGCGGGACTTCCGCCTCGGCCGCCGGTTCTCCGCGGTGGTCAGCAT GTTCAGCTCCGTCGGCTACCTGCGGACGACGGCCGAACTCGACGCGGCCGTCGCCTCGTTCGCCG CGCACCTGGAGCCCGGCGGCGTCGTCGTCGTCGAGCCGTGGTGGTTCCCGGAGACCTTCGCCGAC GGCTGGGTGAGCGCCGATGTCGTCCGGCGGGACGGGCGGACCGTGGCCCGTGTCTCGCACTCGGT GCGGGACGGCGACGCGACGCGCATGGAGGTGCACTTCACCGTGGCGGACCCGGGCCGCGGCGTAC GGCACTTCTCCGACGTCCACCTCATCACCCTGTTCCACCGGGCGGAGTACGAGGCGGCCTTCACG GCCGCCGGGCTGCGCGTCGAGTACCTGGAGGGCGGCCCGTCGGGCCGTGGCCTCTTCGTCGGGGT CCCCGCCTAGTCCCTCGCCCGGTCACCCCACACAGACCCCCGGGGCGTCCCGGGTGCACCAAGCA CAGAGAGAGAAATCCACCGTGACAGGTAAGACCCGAATACCGCGTGTCCGCCGCAGCCGTACGAC CCCCAGGGCCTTCACCCTGGCCGTCGTCGGCACCCTGCTGGCGGGCACCACCGTGGCGGCCGCCG CTCCCGGCGCCGCCGGCACGGGCCACGTGCAGTACACGAGCAAGGCGGCGGAGCTCGTCGCGCAG ATGACGCTCGACGAGAAGATCAGCTTCGTCCACTGGGCGCTGGACCCCGACCGGCAGAACGTCGG CTACCTTCCGGGCGTGCCGCGTCTCGGCATCCCGGAGCTGCGCGCCGCCGACGGCCCGAACGGCA TCCGTCTGGTGGGCAGGACCGCCACCGCGCTGCCCGCGCCGGTCGCCCTGGCCAGCACCTTCGAC GACTCCATGGCCGACAGCTACGGCAGGGTCATGGGCCGCGACGGACGCGCGCTGGGCCAGGACAT GGTTCTGGGCCCGATGATGAACAACATCCGGGTGCCACACGGCGGCCGGAACTACGAGACCTTCA GCGAGGACCCCCTGGTCTCCTCGCGCACCGCGGTCGCCCAGATCAAGGGCATCCAGGGTGCGGGT CTGATGACCACGGCCAAGCACTTCGCGGCCAACAACCAGGAGAACAACCGCTTCAGCGTCAACGC CACGGTCGACGAGCAGACGCTCCGCGAGATCGAGTTCCCGGCGTTCGAGGCGTCCTCGAAGGCCG GCGCGGCCTCCTTCATGTGTGCCTATAACGGCGTCAACGGCAAGCCGTCCTGCGGCAACGACGAG CTGCTCAACAACGTGCTGCGCACGCAGTGGGGCTTCCAGGGCTGGGTGATGTCCGACTGGCTCGC CACCCCGGGCACGGACGCCATCACCAAGGGCCTCGACCAGGAGATGGGCGTCGAGCTCCCCGGCG ACATCCCGCCGGGCGAGCCCTCGCCGCCGGCCAAGTTCTTCGGTGACGCGCTGAAGCAGGCCGTC CTGAACGGCACGGTCCCCGAGGCGGCCGTGACGCGGTCGGCGGAGCGCATCGTCAACCAGATGGA CAAGTTCGGTCTGCTCCTCGCGACTCCGGCGCCCCGCCCCGAGCGTGACAAGGCGGGCGCCCAGG CGGTGTCCCGCAAGGTCGCCGAGAACGGCGCGGTGCTCCTGCGCAACGAGGGCCAGGCCCTGCCG CTCGCCGGTGACGCCGGCAAGAGCATCGCCGTCATCGGCCCGACGGCCGTCGACCCCAAGGTCAC CGGCCTGGGCAGCGCCCACGTCGTCCCGGACTCGGCGGCGGCGCCGCTCGACACCATCAAGGCCC GCGCGGGCGCGGGTGCGACGGTGACGTACGAGACGGGTGAGGAGACCTTCGGGACGCGGATCCCG GCGGCGCAGCTCAGCCCGGCGTTCAACCAGGGCCACCAGCTGGAGCCGGGCAAGGCGGGGGCGCT GTACGACGGCACGCTGACCGTGCCCGCCGACGGCGAGTACCGCATCTCGGTCAAGGCCACCGGTG GCTACGCGACGGTGCAGCTCGGCAGCCACACCATCGAGGCCGGTCAGGTCTACGGCAAGGTGAGC AGCCCGCTCCTCAAGCTGACCAAGGGCACGCACAAGCTCACGATCTCGGGCTTCGCGATGAGCGC CACGCCGCTCTCCCTGGAGCTGGGCTGGGTGACGCCGGAGGCAGCCGACGCGACGATCGCGAAGG CCGTGGAGTCGGCGCGGAAGGCCCGTACGGCCATCGTGTTCGCGTACGACGACGGCACCGAGGGC GTCGACCGTCCGAACCTGTCGCTGCCGGGTACGCAGGACAAGCTGATCTCGGCGGTCGCCGACGC GAACCCGAACACGATCGTGGTCCTCAACACCGGTTCGTCGGTGCTGATGCCGTGGCTGTCCAAGA CCCGCGCGGTCCTGGACATGTGGTACCCGGGCCAGGCGGGCGCCGAGGCGACCGCCGCGCTGCTC TACGGTGACGTGAACCCGAGCGGCAAGCTCACGCAGAGCTTCCCGGCCGCCGAGAACCAGCACGC CGTCGCCGGCGACCCGAACCGCTACCCGGGCGTCGACAACCAGCAGACGTACAGCGAGGGCATCC ACGTCGGGTACCGCTGGTTCGACAAGGAGAACGTCAAGCCGCTGTTCCCGTTCGGGCACGGCCTG TCGTACACCTCGTTCACGCAGAGCGCCCCGACCGTGGTGCGCACGTCCACGGGCGGCCTGAAGGT CACGGTCACGGTGCGCAACAGCGGGCAGCGCGCGGGCCAGGAGGTCGTCCAGGCGTATCTCGGCG CGAGCCCGAAGGTGACGGCTCCGCAGGCGGAGAAGAAGCTCGTGGGCTACACGAAGGTCGCGCTC GCGGCGGGCGAGTCGAAGACGGTGACGGTGAACGTCGACCGCCGTCAGCTGCAGTACTGGGACGC CGCGTCGGACTCGTGGAGGACGGGAACGGGCAGCAGGCTCCTCCAGACCGGTTCGT 
     Contig 122 (SEQ ID NO:12) 
     GGGGGTGATCGCCTTCTCGACGAGCAGCGGGTCGAGGGTGGGGTGGTCCTCGTTCGGCTCGACGG GCACGGGGGTCGCGCCGGTGGCGGAGACCGCGAGCCAGCTGGCGATGTACGTGTGCGAGGGGACG ATCACCTCGTCCCCGGGTCCGATGCCGAGGCCGCGGAGCGCGAGCTGGAGGGCGTCCATGCCGCT GTTCACGCCGACGGCGTGGTCGGTCTCGCAGTAGGTGGCGAACTCGGCTTCGAAGGCTTCGAGTT CGGGGCCGAGGAGGTAGCGCCCCGAGTCGAGTACGCGGGCGATGGCGGCGTCGGTCTCCGGGCGC AGTTCCTCGTAGGCGGCCTTGAGGTCGAGGAAGGGGACCCGGCCGGTCTCGGTGCGGGCGGTCAC GCGGACACCCCCACGGCGGTGGCGGGCGGCTGCGGGGCGGTGGCGGGCGGCTGCGGGGCGGTGGC CTTGAGCGGTTCCCACCAGTCGCGGTTCTCCCGGTACCAGCGGATGGTGCGCGCGAGGCCGTCCG CGAAGGCGATCTGCGGGCGGTAGCCGAGTTCGCGCTCGATCTTGCCGCCGTCGAGGGAGTAGCGC AGGTCGTGGCCCTGGCGGTCGGCGACCCGCCGGACCGAGGACCAGTCGGCGCCGAGCGAGTCCAG GAGGATGCCGGTGAGTTCGCGGTTGGTCAGCTCCCGGCCGCCGCCGATGTGGTAGACCTCGCCGG CCCGGCCGCCCGCGAGGACGAGCGCGATGCCCCGGCAGTGGTCGTCGGTGTGGACCCACTCGCGG ACGTTCGCGCCGTCGCCGTACAGCGGGAGCGTCCCGCCGTCGAGGAGGTTCGTCACGAAGAGGGG GATGAGCTTCTCGGGGTGCTGGTACGGCCCGTAGTTGTTGCAGCAGCGGGTGATCCGTACGTCGA GGCCGTAGGTGCGGTGGTAGGCGCGGGCGACGAGGTCGGAGCCGGCCTTGGAGGCCGCGTAGGGG GAGTTGGGTTCCAGCGGGCTGCTCTCGTTCCACGAGCCGGAGTCGATCGACCCGTACACCTCGTC GGTGGAGACGTGCACGACCCGGCCGACGCCGGCGTCGAGGGCGCACTGGAGCAGGGTCTGCGTGC CCTGGACGTTGGTCCCGGTGAACACGGACGCCCCCGCGATGGAGCGGTCGACGTGGCTCTCGGCG GCGAAGTGGACGACGGCGTCGACGCCGCGCAGTTCCCGGGCGAGGAGGTCGGCGTCGCGGATGTC GCCGTGGACGAACCGCAGCCGCGGGTCCGCTTCCACCGGGGCGAGGTTGGCGCGGTTGCCCGCGT AGGTGAGGCTGTCCAGGACGATCACCTCACCGGCGGGGACGTCGGGGTACGCCCCGGCGAGGAGC TGCCGCACGAAGTGCGAGCCGATGAAGCCCGCACCTCCGGTCACCAGAAGCCGCACTGCCGTCTT CCTTTCGGTCGCGCTGTCGGTGGCACTGCCGGTGGTGGGGGGAACG 
     Sequence information generated from cosmids of the invention can be used to generate additional nucleic acids of the invention as well as to generate additional sequence information regarding the narbonolide PKS enzyme and narbomycin modification enzymes. 
     The invention having now been described by way of written description and example, those of skill in the art will recognize that the invention can be practiced in a variety of embodiments, that the foregoing description and example is for purposes of illustration and not limitation of the following claims. 
     
       
         
           
             12 
           
           
             1 
             1590 
             DNA 
             Streptomyces narbonensis 
           
            1
acaggggata tcccgctcca ggcgaacggt agccgcgtgc cctcgccgaa cgccccgccc     60
gcaccggccg cctgcacggc ggcgtcgagc agcgccgggt ggaggccgaa ccgcgcgccc    120
tcggcgcccg cgacctccgt cggcagggcc acgtcggcga acacctcttc gccgcgccgc    180
cagacgccac ggacgccccg gaagaggggc ccgtagccgt atccgctcgc cgcgaagcgg    240
tcgtacagac cgtccacgtc cactgcttcg gcacccgccg ggggccaggc ctccgggtcg    300
gcgacagggg cggtgcgatc cgtacgggcg agcacaccgg tcgcgtgccg cgtccactcc    360
ggctcgcccg gcgcgtcctc cgggtgcgcg tggagcacga aggtacggcg cccggactcg    420
tcgctcgcgc cgacggacag ctgcacgcgg accgcgccgc gacggggcag gacgagcggg    480
gcgtcgaggg tgagctcctc gaccagatcg cagccgacct ggtcaccggc ccggaaggcc    540
agctccacga acgccgttcc cggcagcagc accgtgccgg ccaccgcgtg gtccgccagc    600
caggggtgcg tacggaggga gaggctcccc gtgagcaggc agccgtcgga gtcggcgagc    660
gcgacggccg cgccgagcag cgggtgctcg gccgccccga gaccggcgga cgtgatgtca    720
ccgacggcgg agtgctcggg ccgcggccag tagcgctcgg tctggaaggc gtaggtgggg    780
aggtcgggga ggtcggcgtt cgtcgcgttc ttcgtggtcg tggtggggag gacgggtgtc    840
cagtcgaggg ggaggccgtt ggtccaggcc tcggcgagcg aggtgaccag acgctcctgg    900
ccgccgtcct cgcggcggag ggtgccgagg ccggtgacgg tgtcggggag ggccatggtg    960
aggacggggt gggcgctgac ctcgacgaag tgggtgaacc cttcgtcggt ggcgagggtt   1020
tcgacggcgg gggcgaagcc gacggggtgg cggaggttgc ggtaccagta cgtggcgtcg   1080
agggcgggtt cggtgatcca ggcaccgtcg agcgtggaga agaaggggac gcgcggagcg   1140
tgcggggtga gtccggcgag gacgtcggcg agctcgttct cgatggtctc gacgtgggcg   1200
ctgtgggagg cgtagtcgac ggggatgatc cgcgcgcgga tgccgtcggc cttgcaggtc   1260
ttcgcgagct cttcgatctg tgcggggtcg ccggagacca cggtggcggt ggggccgttg   1320
acggcggcga tcgacagtcc gtcgagggtg tcgatccgct ccaggacgtc ggcctggctg   1380
agggcgaggg agaccatgcc gcccctgccg gcgaggtgag cggcgatgga ccggctgcgt   1440
agggcgacga cgcgggcggc atcctccagg ctcagtgccc cggcgacgta cgcggcggcg   1500
atctcgccct gggagtggcc gatgacggcc tggggggtga tgccgtggtg ctgccagatc   1560
ttcgcgaggg agaccatgac ggcgaaggtg                                    1590 
           
             2 
             1419 
             DNA 
             Streptomyces narbonensis 
           
            2
cgggctggac gacgtcgacg cggtcgagcg tcggggcgcc gggagcctgt cgtacgacgg     60
cttcgaggga ccagtcgacg tgacgggaga gcgcggtctc gcacgcggcc atctccgccg    120
cgaactccgc agaggagtcc agcagttcgg cacccatccc ggaccactgc gtgccctggc    180
cggggaacac gaacgccacg cgcccgacag cggaagccgt gccacgaatc agcccgtccg    240
ggtcggccag ggcctgtacg aggtcgcccg ccccggtgcc cagcgcgacg gcccggtgct    300
cgaactgcgc ccgcccgtcg gccagtacgc gggcgacggc gccggcgtcg acgtcatccg    360
tacgcccctg agaggcgtac gcggcgagcc gctcgatctg ggcgtcgagt gcaccggcgg    420
acttcgccga caccacccac ggcaccacgc cacccgacga cggctcgtcc acggcggtgt    480
tttccaccgt cggggcctct tcgaggacga cgtgagcgtt cgtcccgctg atgccgaagg    540
aggagacggc ggcgcggcgc agcccgccgt cctgcttctc cggccagtcc acggcctcgg    600
tgaggagttc cacggcaccg gccgaccagt cgatctggtc cgagggggcg tccacgtgaa    660
gcgtcttcgg gagtagcccg tggcgcatcg cctggaccat cttgatgaca ccggcgacac    720
cggccgcggc ctgggtgtgc ccgatgttgg acttcaacga tccgagcagc aacggacgtt    780
cgccgccccg gtcctgcccg taggtggcga tcagggcctg cgcctcgatc gggtcgccga    840
gccgcgtccc cgtgccgtgc gcctcgacga catcgacctc gcccggcgtg agccgggcgt    900
cggccagggc ccgccggatg acgcgctgct gcgacggccc gttcggagcc gtgagaccgt    960
tgctggcgcc gtcctggttc acggcgctgc cgcggacgac cgcgaggacc cggtgtccgt   1020
ggcggcgggc gtccgacagg cgctcgacga ggaggacacc gacaccctcg gaccaactgg   1080
tgccgtccgc cgacgcggcg aacgccttcg accgaccgtc cccggccagc ccgcgctgcc   1140
ggctgaactc cacgaacatc cccggcgtgg gcatcacggc cacgccgccg gcgagcgcca   1200
tgtcgacctc gcccttgcgc agggcctgca cggcgaggtg cagggcgacc agcgacgacg   1260
agcaggcggt gtccaccgtc agggcggggc cctcaaggcc gagcgtgtac gagacgcggc   1320
ccgacatcac gctggccgtg ttgccggtca gcaggtatcc gtcgaggccc tccccgccgt   1380
cgcgcaggct cggcccgtac tcgtgggtca tcgccccgg                          1419 
           
             3 
             1434 
             DNA 
             Streptomyces narbonensis 
           
            3
gaacccgtcg gcgtccgccg agaaggcctt gctccggccg tccggggcga gcgcccgctg     60
ccggctgaac tccacgaaca tgtgcggggt cgccatcatc gccacaccac cggcgagtgc    120
catcgagcat tcaccgctcc gcagcgcccg caccgccagg tgcagggcgg tcagcgagga    180
cgagcaggcg gtgtcgacgg tcgtcgcggg cccttcgaga ccgaaggtgt acgcgatgcg    240
gccggacgcg acgctcggcg tgctgccggt cagcaggtaa ccctccacgc cgcgcggggc    300
gttcgggacg cgggccgcgt agtcctggta ggagaggccg atgaagacac cggtgctgct    360
gccgcgcagc gagcccggct cgatgccggc ccgctcgaac gcctcccagg acgtcgccag    420
gagcatccgc tgctgcgggt ccatggcgag cgcctcgcgc ggcgagacac cgaagaactc    480
cgcgtcgaac tcggccgcgt cgtgcaggaa cccgccctcg cggacgtacg ccttgccgag    540
cgcgtccggg tcggcgtcgt acaggccgtc gaggtcccag ccccggtcgg tggggaaggg    600
cgtgatgccc tcgccgccct cggccagcat ccgccacagg tcctcagggc tgcggatgcc    660
accggggtat cggcagctca tggcgacgat cgcgatcgga tcgtcgtcga caccgagacc    720
gacaccgaga ccgagaccga caccgagacc gacaccggat ccgccaccga caccggatcc    780
gccaccgaga ccagcaccag ctccgccacc gagaccagca ccagctccgg caccgagacc    840
agcgccgaca gcccgcgtcc ccctggccca cgtggactcc gccgccgcgt cctcgtcacc    900
gaggaactcg gcacggagca gtgacgcgag ggccagcggc gtcgggtggt cgaagacgag    960
cgtcgcgggc aaggggagcc cggtcgcccg ggtcagccgg ttgcggagct cgactccggc   1020
gagcgagtcg aagccgatgt ccttgaaggc ccggtcggcg gcgacgtcct caggtgaacg   1080
catccggagc acggcggcgg cctgggcccg tacgagaccg aggaggatct ccgtacgctc   1140
gccgggagcc gcggcggcca gccgctcggc cagcgggttc ccgcccgcgg cggagctgcc   1200
gcccggcccg gccggggcgc tctcccgcgc gtcgatgatg cgccgcacct cgggcagctc   1260
ctcgacgagg ggctgagggc ggccggagga gtacgcgagg tagaaacggt cccagtcgat   1320
gtccgcgacg gtgatcgcgg tctcgtcccg gccgagggcg gactccagtg cggtcagggc   1380
gagttccggg tccatgccgg gtacgccgtg atcgcgcagg cgctcggcca cccc         1434 
           
             4 
             1462 
             DNA 
             Streptomyces narbonensis 
           
            4
agcgggccag gccggagccg gggaccggga ccgggacgtg tccacgccgt ccaggagcac     60
cgcccacacg gatgccctgc tggcacaact caccaggctg gaaggcgcct tggtgctgac    120
gggcctcccg ggcgcccccg ggagcgaaga agtcctggag cacctgcgct cccttcgcgc    180
gatggtcacg ggcgagaccg ggagcgggac cggggccgga agcgggggcg ggggcgcgtc    240
cgcggaatcc gggggcggag acccctacta cgccgacggg ggcgggagtg aggaccgcgc    300
gggagtgccg gacttcatga acgcctcggc cgaggaactc ttcggcctcc tcgacatgga    360
ccccagcacg gactgatccc tgccgcacgg ccgcctcccg ccccgggccc cgtccgagac    420
cccgtcccgg acccgtcccg ggcacctcga ctcgaatcac ttcatgcgcg cctcgggcgc    480
ctccaggaac tcaaggggac agcgtgtcca cggtgaacga agagaagtac ctcgactacc    540
tgcgtcgcgc cacggcggac ctccacgagg cccgcggccg cctccgcgag ctggaggcca    600
gggcgggcga gccggtggcg atcgtcggca tggcctgccg cctgccgggc ggtgtcgcct    660
cgccggagga cctgtggcgg cttgtggccg gtggcgagga cgcgatctcg gagttcccgc    720
aggaccgcgg ctgggacgtg gaggggctgt acgacccgaa cccggaggcc acgggcagga    780
gttacgcccg tgaggccgga ttcctgtacg aggcgggcga gttcgacgcc gacttcttcg    840
ggatctcgcc gcgcgaggcc ctcgccatgg acccgcagca gcggctcctc ctggaggcct    900
cctgggaggc gttcgagcac gccggcatcc cggcggccag tgcgcgcggc acgtcggtcg    960
gcgtcttcac cggcgtgatg taccacgact acgcgacccg tctcaccgac gtccccgagg   1020
gcatcgaggg ctacctgggc accgggaact ccggcagcgt cgcctcgggc cgggtcgcct   1080
acacgctggg cctggagggc ccggccgtca cggtcgacac ggcctgctcg tcctcgctcg   1140
tcgccctgca cctcgccgtg caggccctgc gcaagggcga ggtcgacatg gcgctcgccg   1200
gcggcgtgac ggtcatgtcg actcccagca ccttcgtcga gttcagccgc cagcgcggac   1260
tggcccccga cggccggtcg aagtccttct cgtcgacggc ggacggcacc agctggtccg   1320
agggcgtcgg cgtcctcctc gtcgagcgcc tgtcggacgc ccgtcgcaag ggccaccggg   1380
tgctcgccgt ggtccggggc acggccgtca accaggacgg cgcgagcagc ggcctcaccg   1440
ccccgaacgg cccgtctcag ca                                            1462 
           
             5 
             1881 
             DNA 
             Streptomyces narbonensis 
           
            5
ggtgctccag ggcggcgacc ctgcccatgc cccacaccat ggcctgggcg ggggaggaga     60
tgtggtcggc gcggccgacg gacaccgcgc cacgggtgac gcaccacagc ggagcggcga    120
caccggcgtc ctccagcgcc tgcaccaggg tgagggtggc gccggtgccc cgggtgaagg    180
gggcggggtg gccggggtgc gcgtcctcgt cccaggcgag cagcgagacg acaccgccga    240
cggctccacc ggccgccgcc agggcttcgc ccagcgcctc cgtgagccgc tgccggtcgc    300
tcggtgcgga cacgtccagc cgtacggggt cggcgcccgc accggacagc gcggcgagca    360
ccggggcggc ctcggaggac cggccctcgg gggcgacgac gagccagcga ccggacaggc    420
cggggctctc ggtgccctcg gcgaccgcga gccgcttcca gtcgacgcgg tagcgccagg    480
agtcctgcac ggagccctgg gcggcggggg agtcgtggag ccagtagtga cggcgctgga    540
aggcgtaggt ggggaggtcg gggaggtcgc cggtcgcggc cgggaggacg ggcgcccagt    600
cgacggtgag gccgtgggcc caggcttcgg cgagggaggt gatcaggcgg tcgaggccgc    660
cttgttcgcg gcggagggtg ctgaggcctg tgacggtgtc ggggagggcc atggtgagga    720
cggggtgggc ggagacctcg atgaagtggg tgaagccttc ggttgtggcg agggtttcga    780
tggcgggggc gaagccgacg gggtggcgga ggttgcggta ccagtaggtg gcgtcgaggg    840
cgggttcggt gatccaggtg ccttcgaggg tggagaagaa ggggacgcgc ggagcgtgcg    900
gggtgagtcc ggtgaggacg tcggcgagct cgttctcgat ggtctcgacg tgggcgctgt    960
gggaggcgta gtcgacgggg atgacccgcg cgcggacccc gtccgccttg cacgtacggg   1020
cgagctcctc gatctgtgcg gggtcgcccg aaacgacggt ggcggtgggc ccgttgaggg   1080
cggcgacgga cagcccgtcg aggttctgga tccgctccag gacgtcggtc tggctgaggg   1140
cgagggagat catgccgccc ttgccggcga ggtgagcggc gatggaccgg ctgcgtaggg   1200
cgacgacgcg ggcggcatcc tccaggctca gtgccccggc gacgtacgcg gcggcgatct   1260
cgccttgcga gtgcccgatg acggcctgcg gggtcacgcc gtggtgctgc cagagcttgg   1320
ccagcgagac catgacggcg aaggtgacgg gctgcaccac atcgacgcgg tcgagcgtgg   1380
gggcgccggg tgtctgccgg acgacggcct ccagtgacca gtccacatac ggcgcgagcg   1440
cggcctcgca ctcggccatc gtctccgcga actccttcga cgtgtcgagg agttcggctc   1500
ccattccggc ccactgcgtg ccctggccgg ggaagacgaa cgccacccgg cccacgtccg   1560
tggacgttcc ccgtatcagc ccttccggag cggtcagcgc ctgtgcgaag tcgcccgtcc   1620
cggtgccgat cgcgacggcc cggtgctcga actgcgcgcg cccgtcggcc agtacgcggg   1680
cgacggcgcc ggcgtcgacg tcatccgtac cgccctgcga ggcgtacgcg gcgaggcgcc   1740
cgatctgggc gtccagcgcg gccggagact tcgccgagac cagccacggc accaggccgc   1800
cggcggacgg ctcgacggcc ggggtctcgt ttgtcagggt ctcgtccgcc ggggtctcga   1860
cgacccccgg ggcctcttcg a                                             1881 
           
             6 
             897 
             DNA 
             Streptomyces narbonensis 
           
            6
ggcccggcgg ccctggacct catggccacc gtcctcgccg gcggtaccgg tgaggaccag     60
gtcgccgtgc gcgcctccgg gctgctcgcc cgccgcctcg tccgcgccgc cctccccgct    120
cacgggacgg cttcgccgtg gtggcaggcc gacggcacgg tgctcgtcac cggtgccgac    180
gagccggccg ccgccgaggc cgcgcgccgc ctggcccgcg acggcgccgg acacctcctc    240
ctccacaccg gccccgtggc gggtacggag gactccgacc ccaccgaccc caccgacccc    300
accgacccca ccggcctcac cggcctcgtc gccgagctcg ccgacctcgg cgcgacggcc    360
accgtcgtgt cctgcgacct cacggaccgg gaggcggccg cccggctgct cgccggcgtc    420
tccgacgagc acccgctcag cgccgtcctc cacctgccgc ccaccgtcga ctccgagccg    480
ctcgccgcca ccgacccgga cgcactcgcc cgcgtcgtaa ccgcgaaggc caccgccgcg    540
ctgcacctgg acagcctgct gcgggagtcc gcggcggccg gacgccgtgc acccgtcctc    600
gtcctcttct cctcggtcgc cgcgacctgg ggcggcgccg gacagggcgc gtacgccgcc    660
ggtacggcct tcctcgacgc cctcgccggt cagcaccgtg ccgaagggcc caccgtgacc    720
tccgtggcct ggagcccctg ggagggcagc cgcgtcaccg agggcgcgac cggggagcgg    780
ctgcgccgcc tcggcctgcg ccccctcgct cccgcgacgg cgctcaccgc cctggacacc    840
gcactcggcc acggcgacac ggccgtcacg atcgccgacg tcgactggtc gagcttc       897 
           
             7 
             1681 
             DNA 
             Streptomyces narbonensis 
           
            7
acgtgggaac acgtcctgcg tcccaaggtc gacgcggcgt tcctcctcga cgagctgacc     60
tccacacccg cccacgacct ggccgcgttc gtcatgttct cctccgccgc cgccgtcttc    120
ggcggcgcgg ggcagggcgc atacgccgcc gccaacgcca ccctcgacgc cctcgcctgg    180
cgccgccgcg ccgccggact ccccgccctc tccctcggct ggggcctctg ggcagagaac    240
agcagcatga ccggcggact gagcgacacc gaccgctcgc ggctggctcg ttccggggcg    300
acgcccatgg acagcgaggt gaccctgtcc ctcctggacg cggccatgcg ccgcgacgac    360
ccggcgctcg tcccgatcgc cctggacgtc gccgcgctcc gggcccagga gcgcgacggc    420
atgctggcgc cgctgctcag cgggctcacc cgcgggtcgc gggccggcgg cgctccggtc    480
ggccgccgca gggccgccgc cgacggcacc ggccaggcgg agagggacct gggcgggcgg    540
ctcgccgcga tgaccccgga cgacaggacc gcgcacctgc gggacctcgt ccgtacgcac    600
gtggcgaccg tcctgggaca cggcgccccg agccgggtcg acctggagcg cgccttccgc    660
gacaccggtt tcgactccct caccgccgtc gagctccgca accgcctcaa cgccgccacc    720
gggctgcgcc tcccggccac gctcgtcttc gaccacccca ctccggggga gctcgccggg    780
cacctgctcg acgaactcgc cgccgccgca ggcgggtcct gggcggatga caccgggtcc    840
ggctctgctt ccggctccgg ctccggctcc ggaggcgcgg tctcggctgc ggaccggcag    900
accgcggcgg cactcgccga gctcgaccgg ctggaaggcg tactcgccgc cctcgcgccc    960
gccgccggcg gccgtccgga gctcgccgcc cggctcaggg cgctggccgc ggccctgggg   1020
gacgacggcg gcgccgccac cgaactggac gaggcgtccg acgacgacct cttctccttc   1080
atcgacaagg agctgggcga atccgacttc tgacctgacc tgacccgacc cgaccggcgc   1140
gacaagcgac atcagcacca gcaccagcac cacccagccc ccacacacac ggaacggaca   1200
ggcgagaacg ggagccatgg cgaacaacga agacaagctc cgcgactacc tcaagcgcgt   1260
taccgccgag ctgcagcaga acacccggcg tctgcgcgag atcgagggac gcacgcacga   1320
gccggtggcg atcgtgggca tggcctgccg cctgccgggc ggtgtcgcct cgcccgagga   1380
cctgtggcag ctggtggccg gggacggcga cgcgatctcg gagttcccgc aggaccgcgg   1440
ctgggacgtg gaggggctgt acgacccgga cccggacgcg tccgggcgta cgtactgccg   1500
gtccggcggg ttcctccacg acgcgggcga gttcgacgcc gacttcttcg ggatctcgcc   1560
gcgcgaggcc ctcgccatgg acccgcagca gcggctgtcc ctcaccaccg cgtgggaggc   1620
gatcgagcac gcgggcatcg acccgacgag cctgaagggc agcggcctcg gcgtcttcgt   1680
c                                                                   1681 
           
             8 
             872 
             DNA 
             Streptomyces narbonensis 
           
            8
gagcccgagc cggtgcccgg cggcccgggc agcgtcgccg ccggccccgc cgcggatccg     60
gaaccggaga cgtcgatcga cgacctcgac gccgaggccc tgatccggat ggctctcggc    120
ccgcggaacg cctgagcacc cgccccggcc cgtggctgcc ccggcccttg cccgactgcg    180
ggccgggccc cgggcccgca caccgccacg taccaccccg caccaccgcc ccccacacgc    240
ccacaacgcc atccacgagc ggaagaccac acccagatga cgagttccaa cgagcagttg    300
gtggacgctc tgcgcgcctc cctcaaggag aacgaagaac tccggaaaga gagccgtcgc    360
cgggacgacc ggcggcagga gcccatggcg atcgtcggca tgagctgtcg gttcgcgggc    420
ggcatccagt cccccgagga cctctgggac gcggtggccg ccggcaagga cctcgtatcc    480
gacgtacctg aggagcgcgg ctgggacttc gactccctgt acgacccgga gcccgggcgg    540
aagggcacga cgtacgtccg caacgccgcg ttcctcgacg acgccgccgg cttcgacgcc    600
gcgttcttcg ggatctcgcc gcgcgaggcc ctcgccatgg acccgcagca gcggcagctc    660
ctcgaagcct cctgggaggt cttcgagcgg gccggcatcg accccgcgtc ggtgcgcggc    720
accgatgtcg gcgtgtacgt gggatgcggc taccaggact acgcgccgga catccgggtc    780
gcccccgagg ggaccgacgg ttacgtcgtc accggcaact catccgccgt ggcctccggg    840
cgcatcgcgt actccctcgg tctcgagggg cc                                  872 
           
             9 
             1112 
             DNA 
             Streptomyces narbonensis 
           
            9
gctcggcgaa ctccccgcgc cgacccgccg gcacaccgag caccgcggcc gccgcgcccg     60
tcaccgccgg acggacgaaa ccccccacca actcgaaggc gtacgaagcc gacgggtccg    120
gcgcgagacc ctccaggatc tgccggtgga cctcctcgac cacggcccgg cgctgccccg    180
cccacgcccc cggcacctcg gcggccgccc gcggcgcctg ctcgtgctcc agcgggcagc    240
cctccccgta ggagaggacc tgctgcggca ccgggacgcc gtggcacccg gcaccccgaa    300
ctccgtcgag cacaggacgc tcgccgccac ggcgtgatcg gcggtgaccc agctgcccgt    360
cgggctgaag gagagcacgc cccgggcgcg cacccgctcg tacgcgggat acggatcgtc    420
ggcctgcccg cgcagcacgg cggcgtacgg gtcgccgttc gcggcgtgga tccagtggat    480
gccgcgggtc tccaggaggt gggcaccgag ctcggggtcg gccaccgcgc tgacggtgcg    540
gcccagcgga ggctgcgtga gcgcccgcgc cgggtcgtcg gtcaccgtgg gttctgccat    600
cgtttcgccg ctccttcgat cagtcgggtc gggggctgca cgacgcggga atcgggcgcg    660
ccgcgggtga cgagcaggtg gtcggagatg tcgttgcaga tcccgtgcca ctggtcgttg    720
aggtagaagt gaccgccgga gtacgcccgc aggcagaacg gcccgctggt gtgccggcgc    780
cactcggcca cctcgttcag cggcgccttc gggtcgcggt cgccggccag ggccatcacc    840
gggcaggcga gcttcgcgga gggccggtgc tcgtacgtct ccgccgcctt gtagtcgctg    900
cgcagcgcgg gcagcaccag ccgcatcagc tcgtcgtcct ggaggaaccg ctcgtccgtg    960
ccgctgagct gccggatctc ggccaggaac gcccggtcgt ccagctggtg gacgagccgg   1020
tccggtgcca gggacggggc gcgccggccg gagacgtaca ggccctcggg ccgtaccccg   1080
tgccgctgtt cgaggatgcg ggccgcctcg ta                                 1112 
           
             10 
             1600 
             DNA 
             Streptomyces narbonensis 
           
            10
ggggacgatc cccgccgggg tggggtcgcg atgggtctcc tcgcgcagcc ggtgcgcggc     60
ggcgaggacc gaggggtcgt cgaggatgcg gacgaccgcg tcccgcaccg cctgcggggt    120
gaggccggca ggcggcagga agaaccccgc cccctgctcc gcgacggccc gcgccttgac    180
cggcgcgtcc cacagctcgg cgagcatgac ctgcggcacc gcgttgatca cggcggtcgc    240
gtacgtaccg gccccgccgt ggtggacgat cgccgaacag ctcggcagca gcgcgtgcat    300
cggcacgaag tccgtgaacc gcgtgtgctt cggataggag cggatctccg cgcgctgacc    360
cgcgtcgagc gtggccacga gctcgatgtc gaggtcggcg agcgcctcca ggatgtcggc    420
ctgcgagacc ccgtcgccgc cgaggacctc ccgcgcggag acaccgagag tgaggcagac    480
ccggggccgc gccggcggct cggcgagcca gtccggcacg accgacgtgc cgttgtacgg    540
aacgtactgc accccgacgg tcggcagacc cgtgtcgaga cgcagactcg gcggagtcgg    600
gtcgaccgtg aactggccgg tgagcagctc ctcttcgaag gaggcgccga accggtccag    660
cgtccacgtc agccactccg ccgtggggtc ctcacggtgc tccggcggct gccggtcccg    720
cagcgcgacg aacttgcggc gggcgctccc catcacgtcg ggcccccaca ggacccgggc    780
gtgcgcggcg cccgtgacct gggcggcgac ggcgcccgcg tacgtcgtcg gctcccacag    840
caccaggtcc ggctgccagg acctggcgaa gccgaccagg tcgtcgatca tcgagtcgtt    900
gttggcgagc agatagaagt acggggcgag gatcgcgtcg atgccgaggg cgtggtccca    960
gtccagcggc tcgctacggg cctcgtcgaa ggcgatcgcc ggatggttcg ggcgcggctc   1020
gcccgccatc cgcacccggt actcgtggat gaggtgatcc gtgccgacgg gcacggccgc   1080
gagccctgac ccggtgatgg tgtccgtgag cgcgggctgg ctcgcgaccc gcacctcgtg   1140
cccggcggcg agcagcgccc aggccagggg aacgaggccg tagtagtgcg tgtgatgtgc   1200
gaacgaggtc agcaggacgc gcatggcgtc gtgtccttcc ttgccggtga agggtcgggg   1260
tggggaggcg gggtggggag gtcggaacgg actcaggagc cgaccgggac gctcagcggc   1320
ccgcggccga caggggcgcg gcggggacgg agcacgggcc cggccttccg cagcccgggg   1380
aaacgcccgg ccagggtccg cagcgcgacc tccgcctgga gccgcaccag cgacgccacc   1440
gggccgtacg gaccggcggg gtgcagcgcg aggtgcgccg tggcgtcggg gcgcgcgagg   1500
tcgaaacgct ccgggtccgt gaagaccccc gggtcccggc cggtgccggc ggtgaggacg   1560
acgacatgcg ccccggccgg gagacgccgg cccgccagct                         1600 
           
             11 
             3241 
             DNA 
             Streptomyces narbonensis 
           
            11
gcaggagtcc cgtgtacgaa gtcgaccacg ccgacgtcta cgacctcttc tacctcggtc     60
gcggcaagga ctacgccgcc gaggcctccg acatcgccga cctggtgcgg acccgtaccc    120
ccgaggcctc ctcgctcctg gacgtggcct gcggtacggg cacgcatctg gagcacttca    180
ccaaggagtt cggcgacacc gccggcctgg agctgtccga ggacatgctg acccacgccc    240
ggaagcggct gcccgacgcg acgctccacc agggcgacat gcgggacttc cgcctcggcc    300
gccggttctc cgcggtggtc agcatgttca gctccgtcgg ctacctgcgg acgacggccg    360
aactcgacgc ggccgtcgcc tcgttcgccg cgcacctgga gcccggcggc gtcgtcgtcg    420
tcgagccgtg gtggttcccg gagaccttcg ccgacggctg ggtgagcgcc gatgtcgtcc    480
ggcgggacgg gcggaccgtg gcccgtgtct cgcactcggt gcgggacggc gacgcgacgc    540
gcatggaggt gcacttcacc gtggcggacc cgggccgcgg cgtacggcac ttctccgacg    600
tccacctcat caccctgttc caccgggcgg agtacgaggc ggccttcacg gccgccgggc    660
tgcgcgtcga gtacctggag ggcggcccgt cgggccgtgg cctcttcgtc ggggtccccg    720
cctagtccct cgcccggtca ccccacacag acccccgggg cgtcccgggt gcaccaagca    780
cagagagaga aatccaccgt gacaggtaag acccgaatac cgcgtgtccg ccgcagccgt    840
acgaccccca gggccttcac cctggccgtc gtcggcaccc tgctggcggg caccaccgtg    900
gcggccgccg ctcccggcgc cgccggcacg ggccacgtgc agtacacgag caaggcggcg    960
gagctcgtcg cgcagatgac gctcgacgag aagatcagct tcgtccactg ggcgctggac   1020
cccgaccggc agaacgtcgg ctaccttccg ggcgtgccgc gtctcggcat cccggagctg   1080
cgcgccgccg acggcccgaa cggcatccgt ctggtgggca ggaccgccac cgcgctgccc   1140
gcgccggtcg ccctggccag caccttcgac gactccatgg ccgacagcta cggcagggtc   1200
atgggccgcg acggacgcgc gctgggccag gacatggttc tgggcccgat gatgaacaac   1260
atccgggtgc cacacggcgg ccggaactac gagaccttca gcgaggaccc cctggtctcc   1320
tcgcgcaccg cggtcgccca gatcaagggc atccagggtg cgggtctgat gaccacggcc   1380
aagcacttcg cggccaacaa ccaggagaac aaccgcttca gcgtcaacgc cacggtcgac   1440
gagcagacgc tccgcgagat cgagttcccg gcgttcgagg cgtcctcgaa ggccggcgcg   1500
gcctccttca tgtgtgccta taacggcgtc aacggcaagc cgtcctgcgg caacgacgag   1560
ctgctcaaca acgtgctgcg cacgcagtgg ggcttccagg gctgggtgat gtccgactgg   1620
ctcgccaccc cgggcacgga cgccatcacc aagggcctcg accaggagat gggcgtcgag   1680
ctccccggcg acatcccgcc gggcgagccc tcgccgccgg ccaagttctt cggtgacgcg   1740
ctgaagcagg ccgtcctgaa cggcacggtc cccgaggcgg ccgtgacgcg gtcggcggag   1800
cgcatcgtca accagatgga caagttcggt ctgctcctcg cgactccggc gccccgcccc   1860
gagcgtgaca aggcgggcgc ccaggcggtg tcccgcaagg tcgccgagaa cggcgcggtg   1920
ctcctgcgca acgagggcca ggccctgccg ctcgccggtg acgccggcaa gagcatcgcc   1980
gtcatcggcc cgacggccgt cgaccccaag gtcaccggcc tgggcagcgc ccacgtcgtc   2040
ccggactcgg cggcggcgcc gctcgacacc atcaaggccc gcgcgggcgc gggtgcgacg   2100
gtgacgtacg agacgggtga ggagaccttc gggacgcgga tcccggcggc gcagctcagc   2160
ccggcgttca accagggcca ccagctggag ccgggcaagg cgggggcgct gtacgacggc   2220
acgctgaccg tgcccgccga cggcgagtac cgcatctcgg tcaaggccac cggtggctac   2280
gcgacggtgc agctcggcag ccacaccatc gaggccggtc aggtctacgg caaggtgagc   2340
agcccgctcc tcaagctgac caagggcacg cacaagctca cgatctcggg cttcgcgatg   2400
agcgccacgc cgctctccct ggagctgggc tgggtgacgc cggaggcagc cgacgcgacg   2460
atcgcgaagg ccgtggagtc ggcgcggaag gcccgtacgg ccatcgtgtt cgcgtacgac   2520
gacggcaccg agggcgtcga ccgtccgaac ctgtcgctgc cgggtacgca ggacaagctg   2580
atctcggcgg tcgccgacgc gaacccgaac acgatcgtgg tcctcaacac cggttcgtcg   2640
gtgctgatgc cgtggctgtc caagacccgc gcggtcctgg acatgtggta cccgggccag   2700
gcgggcgccg aggcgaccgc cgcgctgctc tacggtgacg tgaacccgag cggcaagctc   2760
acgcagagct tcccggccgc cgagaaccag cacgccgtcg ccggcgaccc gaaccgctac   2820
ccgggcgtcg acaaccagca gacgtacagc gagggcatcc acgtcgggta ccgctggttc   2880
gacaaggaga acgtcaagcc gctgttcccg ttcgggcacg gcctgtcgta cacctcgttc   2940
acgcagagcg ccccgaccgt ggtgcgcacg tccacgggcg gcctgaaggt cacggtcacg   3000
gtgcgcaaca gcgggcagcg cgcgggccag gaggtcgtcc aggcgtatct cggcgcgagc   3060
ccgaaggtga cggctccgca ggcggagaag aagctcgtgg gctacacgaa ggtcgcgctc   3120
gcggcgggcg agtcgaagac ggtgacggtg aacgtcgacc gccgtcagct gcagtactgg   3180
gacgccgcgt cggactcgtg gaggacggga acgggcagca ggctcctcca gaccggttcg   3240
t                                                                   3241 
           
             12 
             1476 
             DNA 
             Streptomyces narbonensis 
           
            12
gggggtgatc gccttctcga cgagcagcgg gtcgagggtg gggtggtcct cgttcggctc     60
gacgggcacg ggggtcgcgc cggtggcgga gaccgcgagc cagctggcga tgtacgtgtg    120
cgaggggacg atcacctcgt ccccgggtcc gatgccgagg ccgcggagcg cgagctggag    180
ggcgtccatg ccgctgttca cgccgacggc gtggtcggtc tcgcagtagg tggcgaactc    240
ggcttcgaag gcttcgagtt cggggccgag gaggtagcgc cccgagtcga gtacgcgggc    300
gatggcggcg tcggtctccg ggcgcagttc ctcgtaggcg gccttgaggt cgaggaaggg    360
gacccggccg gtctcggtgc gggcggtcac gcggacaccc ccacggcggt ggcgggcggc    420
tgcggggcgg tggcgggcgg ctgcggggcg gtggccttga gcggttccca ccagtcgcgg    480
ttctcccggt accagcggat ggtgcgcgcg aggccgtccg cgaaggcgat ctgcgggcgg    540
tagccgagtt cgcgctcgat cttgccgccg tcgagggagt agcgcaggtc gtggccctgg    600
cggtcggcga cccgccggac cgaggaccag tcggcgccga gcgagtccag gaggatgccg    660
gtgagttcgc ggttggtcag ctcccggccg ccgccgatgt ggtagacctc gccggcccgg    720
ccgcccgcga ggacgagcgc gatgccccgg cagtggtcgt cggtgtggac ccactcgcgg    780
acgttcgcgc cgtcgccgta cagcgggagc gtcccgccgt cgaggaggtt cgtcacgaag    840
agggggatga gcttctcggg gtgctggtac ggcccgtagt tgttgcagca gcgggtgatc    900
cgtacgtcga ggccgtaggt gcggtggtag gcgcgggcga cgaggtcgga gccggccttg    960
gaggccgcgt agggggagtt gggttccagc gggctgctct cgttccacga gccggagtcg   1020
atcgacccgt acacctcgtc ggtggagacg tgcacgaccc ggccgacgcc ggcgtcgagg   1080
gcgcactgga gcagggtctg cgtgccctgg acgttggtcc cggtgaacac ggacgccccc   1140
gcgatggagc ggtcgacgtg gctctcggcg gcgaagtgga cgacggcgtc gacgccgcgc   1200
agttcccggg cgaggaggtc ggcgtcgcgg atgtcgccgt ggacgaaccg cagccgcggg   1260
tccgcttcca ccggggcgag gttggcgcgg ttgcccgcgt aggtgaggct gtccaggacg   1320
atcacctcac cggcggggac gtcggggtac gccccggcga ggagctgccg cacgaagtgc   1380
gagccgatga agcccgcacc tccggtcacc agaagccgca ctgccgtctt cctttcggtc   1440
gcgctgtcgg tggcactgcc ggtggtgggg ggaacg                             1476