Identification of a diarylpentanoid-producing polyketide synthase revealing an unusual biosynthetic pathway of 2-(2-phenylethyl)chromones in agarwood

2-(2-Phenylethyl)chromones (PECs) are the principal constituents contributing to the distinctive fragrance of agarwood. How PECs are biosynthesized is currently unknown. In this work, we describe a diarylpentanoid-producing polyketide synthase (PECPS) identified from Aquilaria sinensis . Through bio...

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Veröffentlicht in:Nature communications 2022-01, Vol.13 (1), p.348-12, Article 348
Hauptverfasser: Wang, Xiao-Hui, Gao, Bo-Wen, Nakashima, Yu, Mori, Takahiro, Zhang, Zhong-Xiu, Kodama, Takeshi, Lee, Yuan-E, Zhang, Ze-Kun, Wong, Chin-Piow, Liu, Qian-Qian, Qi, Bo-Wen, Wang, Juan, Li, Jun, Liu, Xiao, Abe, Ikuro, Morita, Hiroyuki, Tu, Peng-Fei, Shi, She-Po
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:2-(2-Phenylethyl)chromones (PECs) are the principal constituents contributing to the distinctive fragrance of agarwood. How PECs are biosynthesized is currently unknown. In this work, we describe a diarylpentanoid-producing polyketide synthase (PECPS) identified from Aquilaria sinensis . Through biotransformation experiments using fluorine-labeled substrate, transient expression of PECPS in Nicotiana benthamiana , and knockdown of PECPS expression in A. sinensis calli, we demonstrate that the C 6 –C 5 –C 6 scaffold of diarylpentanoid is the common precursor of PECs, and PECPS plays a crucial role in PECs biosynthesis. Crystal structure (1.98 Å) analyses and site-directed mutagenesis reveal that, due to its small active site cavity (247 Å 3 ), PECPS employs a one-pot formation mechanism including a “diketide-CoA intermediate-released” step for the formation of the C 6 –C 5 –C 6 scaffold. The identification of PECPS, the pivotal enzyme of PECs biosynthesis, provides insight into not only the feasibility of overproduction of pharmaceutically important PECs using metabolic engineering approaches, but also further exploration of how agarwood is formed. 2-(2-Phenylethyl)chromones (PECs) contribute to the distinctive fragrance of agarwood. Here the authors identify a diarylpentanoid-producing polyketide synthase from Aquilaria sinensis and show how it catalyzes PEC formation.
ISSN:2041-1723
2041-1723
DOI:10.1038/s41467-022-27971-z