| Literature DB >> 33240856 |
Kaouthar Eljounaidi1, Benjamin R Lichman1.
Abstract
Plants produce a diverse array of natural products, many of which have high pharmaceutical value or therapeutic potential. However, these compounds often occur at low concentrations in uncultivated species. Producing phytochemicals in heterologous systems has the potential to address the bioavailability issues related to obtaining these molecules from their natural source. Plants are suitable heterologous systems for the production of valuable phytochemicals as they are autotrophic, derive energy and carbon from photosynthesis, and have similar cellular context to native producer plants. In this review we highlight the methods that are used to elucidate natural product biosynthetic pathways, including the approaches leading to proposing the sequence of enzymatic steps, selecting enzyme candidates and characterizing gene function. We will also discuss the advantages of using plant chasses as production platforms for high value phytochemicals. In addition, through this report we will assess the emerging metabolic engineering strategies that have been developed to enhance and optimize the production of natural and novel bioactive phytochemicals in heterologous plant systems.Entities:
Keywords: bioactive chemicals; biosynthesis; biosynthetic pathway; gene discovery; metabolic engineering; natural products; phytochemicals; synthetic biology
Year: 2020 PMID: 33240856 PMCID: PMC7680914 DOI: 10.3389/fchem.2020.596479
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Chem ISSN: 2296-2646 Impact factor: 5.221
Figure 1Examples of plant specialized metabolites of pharmaceutical significance. (A) Terpenoids: artemisinin and taxol. Isoprene units are highlighted with colors. (B) Alkaloids: camptothecin, vinblastine, and vincristine with tryptophan precursor highlighted; morphine tyrosine precursors highlighted. (C) Phenolics: etoposide and teniposide with phenylpropanoid units highlighted.
Figure 2Overview of the approaches that can be employed to discover unknown enzymes in a biosynthetic pathway of interest. (A) Identification of candidate genes in plant material with difference in metabolites accumulation, through co-expression analysis or phylogenetic analysis to examine whether a gene clade is specific to the native plant producer. (B) Mining genomic data to look for genes that are physically localized in the vicinity of previously characterized enzymes (gene clusters). (C) Total protein purification and fractionation from the native plant material, followed by functional assays and proteomic identification of the active fraction.
Figure 3Overview of the functional characterization methods that can be utilized to determine gene function; enzymatic assays, heterologous expression of candidate biosynthetic genes in microbial host (yeast cells), and heterologous expression in planta (Nicotiana benthamiana).
Examples of engineered cellular/subcellular localization of phytochemical production in Nicotiana sp.
| Synthetic hydrophobic organelles | Transient expression; fusing terpenoid enzymes to a microalgal lipid droplet surface protein | Diterpenoids | 2.5 fold increase of target diterpenoids/diterpenoids acids | Sadre et al., | |
| Lipid bodies | Transient expression; Co-expression of α-bisabolol synthase with fatty acids biosynthesis regulators | Sesquiterpenoids | 2–4 fold increase of; α-bisabolol, (E)-β -caryophyllene and α-barbatene. | Delatte et al., | |
| Plastids | Stable transformation; plastome and nuclear transformation with artemisinic acid biosynthetic genes and other enzymes known to affect the metabolic flux | Sesquiterpenoids (artemisinic acid) | Accumulation of more than 120 mg/kg FW of Artemisinic acid. | Fuentes et al., | |
| Glandular trichomes | Stable transformation; Casbene synthase/Trichome-specific promoters | Diterpenoids (casbene) | Accumulation of 1 mg/g FW of casbene | Tissier et al., | |
| Glandular trichomes | Stable transformation; taxadiene synthase/Trichome-specific promoters | Diterpenoids (Taxadiene) | Accumulation of 100 μg/g FW of taxadiene | Tissier et al., |
Examples of novel compounds produced through combinatorial biosynthesis using transient expression in N. benthamiana.
| Germacrene A synthase (GAS) Germacrene A oxidase (GAO) | Sesquiterpenoids | Costunolide and parthenolide derivatives | Kashkooli Beyraghdar et al., | |
| Oat, licorice, soy bean, barrel clover | β-amyrin synthase and β-amyrin-oxidizing P450s | Triterpenoids | β-amyrin derivatives | Reed et al., |
| Various species | Class I/II diterpene synthases | Diterpenoids | Diverse diterpene skeletons | Andersen-Ranberg et al., |
| Cytochrome P450s | Isothiocyanate | Crucifalexins | Calgaro-Kozina et al., |