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Metabolic engineering of Saccharomyces cerevisiae for chelerythrine biosynthesis.

Authors :
Zhu, Jiawei
Zhang, Kai
He, Yuanzhi
Zhang, Qi
Ran, Yanpeng
Tan, Zaigao
Cui, Li
Feng, Yan
Source :
Microbial Cell Factories. 6/21/2024, Vol. 23 Issue 1, p1-13. 13p.
Publication Year :
2024

Abstract

Background: Chelerythrine is an important alkaloid used in agriculture and medicine. However, its structural complexity and low abundance in nature hampers either bulk chemical synthesis or extraction from plants. Here, we reconstructed and optimized the complete biosynthesis pathway for chelerythrine from (S)-reticuline in Saccharomyces cerevisiae using genetic reprogramming. Results: The first-generation strain Z4 capable of producing chelerythrine was obtained via heterologous expression of seven plant-derived enzymes (McoBBE, TfSMT, AmTDC, EcTNMT, PsMSH, EcP6H, and PsCPR) in S. cerevisiae W303-1 A. When this strain was cultured in the synthetic complete (SC) medium supplemented with 100 µM of (S)-reticuline for 10 days, it produced up to 0.34 µg/L chelerythrine. Furthermore, efficient metabolic engineering was performed by integrating multiple-copy rate-limiting genes (TfSMT, AmTDC, EcTNMT, PsMSH, EcP6H, PsCPR, INO2, and AtATR1), tailoring the heme and NADPH engineering, and engineering product trafficking by heterologous expression of MtABCG10 to enhance the metabolic flux of chelerythrine biosynthesis, leading to a nearly 900-fold increase in chelerythrine production. Combined with the cultivation process, chelerythrine was obtained at a titer of 12.61 mg per liter in a 0.5 L bioreactor, which is over 37,000-fold higher than that of the first-generation recombinant strain. Conclusions: This is the first heterologous reconstruction of the plant-derived pathway to produce chelerythrine in a yeast cell factory. Applying a combinatorial engineering strategy has significantly improved the chelerythrine yield in yeast and is a promising approach for synthesizing functional products using a microbial cell factory. This achievement underscores the potential of metabolic engineering and synthetic biology in revolutionizing natural product biosynthesis. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
14752859
Volume :
23
Issue :
1
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
Microbial Cell Factories
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
178027095
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1186/s12934-024-02448-4