| Literature DB >> 28959415 |
Wanping Chen1, Runfa Chen1, Qingpei Liu1,2, Yi He1, Kun He1, Xiaoli Ding1, Lijing Kang1, Xiaoxiao Guo1, Nana Xie1, Youxiang Zhou3, Yuanyuan Lu2,4, Russell J Cox5, István Molnár2, Mu Li1, Yanchun Shao1, Fusheng Chen1.
Abstract
Monascus azaphilone pigments (MonAzPs) are very widely used as food colorants, but their biosynthetic pathway has remained poorly characterized for more than half a century. In this study, the individual steps of MonAzPs biosynthesis in Monascus ruber M7 were elucidated by a combination of targeted gene knockouts, heterologous gene expression, and in vitro chemical and enzymatic reactions. This study describes the first rational engineering of MonAzPs biosynthesis and provides a roadmap for future pathway engineering efforts directed towards the selective production of the most valuable pigments and serves as a model for the biosynthesis of fungal azaphilones in general.Entities:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28959415 PMCID: PMC5603960 DOI: 10.1039/c7sc00475c
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Chem Sci ISSN: 2041-6520 Impact factor: 9.825
Scheme 1Previously assumed framework to synthetize six classical MonAzPs.
Fig. 1Synteny analysis of the MonAzPs biosynthetic gene clusters. (A) Comparison of the structures of MonAzPs biosynthetic gene clusters among five Monascus strains reveals four syntenic regions (I–IV). The minimal set of MonAzPs biosynthetic genes, as summarized in (C), was highlighted by colors. (B) Pigment biosynthetic gene clusters from P. marneffei and T. stipitatus. Compared with their Monascus counterparts, an extra cytochrome P450-encoding gene is present in these clusters, whereas genes similar to mrpigF and mrpigO are found only outside the clusters. (C) Annotation of the M. ruber M7 MonAzPs biosynthetic genes and their percent identities with their counterparts in the six remaining clusters. Colors are shown only for clarity and reflect the levels of sequence similarity for these homologous genes.
Scheme 2Proposed biosynthetic pathway for MonAzPs in M. ruber M7. Yellow pigments: 1, 2, 7–10, 13–17, 19–25, 29, 30, and 33–35. Orange pigments: 3, and 4. Red pigments: 5, 6, and 36. 36 is a model for amino acid derivatives of red MonAzPs. The spectral data is kept in ESI† Sections 6 and 9. 12, 18, and 26–28 are too reactive to isolate, whereas other compounds in square brackets were detected by MS but were not present in high enough concentration for NMR analysis. The main MonAzPs pathway is emphasized with bold arrows. Shunt pathways that contribute to the diversity of yellow pigments are boxed in color. See text for abbreviations. Red atoms and bonds indicate the chemical changes.
Fig. 2MonAzPs produced by the wild type M. ruber M7 and its gene knockout mutants. Representative UPLC profiles recorded at 370 nm are shown for fermentation extracts from the indicated knockouts and WT (the wild type M. ruber M7). See ESI† Sections 5 and 6 for the isolation, quantification, and structure elucidation for MonAzPs and their intermediates.
Scheme 3Reductive transformations channel azaphilone pigment biosynthesis. A. Intramolecular Knoevenagel aldol condensation at the C-5 to C-2′ register is not favored in intermediates 18 and 26 in M. ruber M7. B. The reaction catalyzed by CazP.[45] Red crosses indicate reactions that are not observed.