De novo biosynthesis of bioactive isoflavonoids by engineered yeast cell factories
Isoflavonoids comprise a class of plant natural products with great nutraceutical, pharmaceutical and agricultural significance. Their low abundance in nature and structural complexity however hampers access to these phytochemicals through traditional crop-based manufacturing or chemical synthesis....
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Veröffentlicht in: | Nature communications 2021-10, Vol.12 (1), p.6085-6085, Article 6085 |
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Zusammenfassung: | Isoflavonoids comprise a class of plant natural products with great nutraceutical, pharmaceutical and agricultural significance. Their low abundance in nature and structural complexity however hampers access to these phytochemicals through traditional crop-based manufacturing or chemical synthesis. Microbial bioproduction therefore represents an attractive alternative. Here, we engineer the metabolism of
Saccharomyces cerevisiae
to become a platform for efficient production of daidzein, a core chemical scaffold for isoflavonoid biosynthesis, and demonstrate its application towards producing bioactive glucosides from glucose, following the screening-reconstruction-application engineering framework. First, we rebuild daidzein biosynthesis in yeast and its production is then improved by 94-fold through screening biosynthetic enzymes, identifying rate-limiting steps, implementing dynamic control, engineering substrate trafficking and fine-tuning competing metabolic processes. The optimized strain produces up to 85.4 mg L
−1
of daidzein and introducing plant glycosyltransferases in this strain results in production of bioactive puerarin (72.8 mg L
−1
) and daidzin (73.2 mg L
−1
). Our work provides a promising step towards developing synthetic yeast cell factories for de novo biosynthesis of value-added isoflavonoids and the multi-phased framework may be extended to engineer pathways of complex natural products in other microbial hosts.
Isoflavonoids are a class of industrially important plant natural products, but their low abundance and structural complexity limits their availability. Here, the authors engineer
Saccharomyces cerevisiae
metabolism to become a platform for efficient production of daidzein which is core chemical scaffold for isoflavonoid biosynthesis, and show its application for production of bioactive glucosides from glucose. |
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ISSN: | 2041-1723 2041-1723 |
DOI: | 10.1038/s41467-021-26361-1 |