| Literature DB >> 29589124 |
Waqas Khan Kayani1, Bushra Hafeez Kiani2, Erum Dilshad3, Bushra Mirza4.
Abstract
Artemisinin and its analogues are naturally occurring most effective antimalarial secondary metabolites. These compounds also possess activity against various types of cancer cells, schistosomiasis, and some viral diseases. Artemisinin and its derivatives (A&D) are found in very low amounts in the only natural source i.e. Artemisia plant. To meet the global needs, plant sources have been exploited for the enhanced production of these natural products because their chemical synthesis is not profitable. The generally adopted approaches include non-transgenic (tissue and cell cultures) and transgenic together with the cell, tissue, and whole transgenic plant cultures. The genes targeted for the overproduction of A&D include the biosynthetic pathway genes, trichome development genes and rol genes, etc. Artemisinin is naturally produced in trichomes of leaves. At the same time, transgenic hairy roots are considered a good source to harvest artemisinin. However, the absence of trichomes in hairy roots suggests that artemisinin biosynthesis is not limited to trichomes. Moreover, the expression of the gene involved in trichome development and sesquiterpenoid biosynthesis (TFAR1) in transgenic and non-transgenic roots provokes researchers to look for new insight of artemisinin biosynthesis. Here we discuss and review precisely the various biotechnological approaches for the enhanced biosynthesis of A&D.Entities:
Keywords: Artemisia; Artemisinin; Biotechnology; Cell cultures; Hairy roots; Transgenics
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29589124 PMCID: PMC5871647 DOI: 10.1007/s11274-018-2432-9
Source DB: PubMed Journal: World J Microbiol Biotechnol ISSN: 0959-3993 Impact factor: 3.312
Fig. 1A schematic diagram showing isopentenyl diphosphate and artemisinin biosynthetic pathway (Arsenault et al. 2010a)
Review articles describing biosynthesis of A&D and their uses
| S. No. | Titles | References |
|---|---|---|
| 01 | Sesquiterpene lactones from | Ivanescu et al. ( |
| 02 | Secondary metabolism of hairy root cultures in bioreactors | Kim et al. ( |
| 03 | Artemisinin: current state and perspectives for biotechnological production of an antimalarial drug | Liu et al. ( |
| 04 | Medicinal Importance of | Ahmad et al. ( |
| 05 | Metabolic engineering of artemisinin biosynthesis in | Liu et al. ( |
| 06 | The molecular mechanism of action of artemisinin-the debate continues | O’Neill et al. ( |
| 07 | The | Abad et al. ( |
| 08 | Obolskiy et al. ( | |
| 09 | Dried-leaf | Weathers et al. ( |
| 10 | Artemisinin production in | Weathers et al. ( |
| 11 | Recent advances in artemisinin production through heterologous expression | Arsenault et al. ( |
| 12 | Trichomes + roots + ROS = artemisinin: regulating artemisinin biosynthesis in | Nguyen et al. ( |
| 13 | Transgenic approach to increase artemisinin content in | Tang et al. ( |
| 14 | Secondary metabolites of | Bhakuni et al. ( |
| 15 | Artemisinin, a novel antimalarial drug: biochemical and molecular approaches for enhanced production | Abdin et al. ( |
| 16 | Artemisinin production in | Weathers et al. ( |
| 17 | Artemisinin: the biosynthetic pathway and its regulation in | Weathers et al. ( |
| 19 | Use of whole plant | Mostafa et al. ( |
| 20 | Oxidative stress in malaria and artemisinin combination therapy: Pros and Cons | Kavishe et al. ( |
| 21 | A review of biotechnological artemisinin production in plants | Ikram and Simonsen ( |
| 22 | Malaria and artemisinin derivatives: an updated review | Tayyab Ansari et al. ( |
| 23 | New insights into artemisinin regulation | Lv et al. ( |
| 24 | Anticancer Activity of Artemisinin and its Derivatives | Slezakova and Ruda-Kucerova ( |
| 25 | Valentine et al. ( | |
| 26 | Antimalarial qinghaosu/artemisinin: The therapy worthy of a Nobel Prize | Krungkrai and Krungkrai ( |
Fig. 2Transgenic approaches in the biotechnological production of artemisinin
Fig. 3Trichomes present on leaf surfaces of Artemisia species (a–c), while transgenic hairy roots are devoid of trichomes (d). a Fluorescent microscopy of leaf of transgenic A. annua containing rol genes, b environmental scanning electron microscopy of the leaf of transgenic A. annua harboring rol genes, c confocal microscopy of leaf of transgenic A. annua containing rol genes, d environmental scanning election microscopy of leaf of untransformed in vitro grown A. annua