Yeast as a promising heterologous host for steroid bioproduction

With the rapid development of synthetic biology and metabolic engineering technologies, yeast has been generally considered as promising hosts for the bioproduction of secondary metabolites. Sterols are essential components of cell membrane, and are the precursors for the biosynthesis of steroid hor...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of industrial microbiology & biotechnology 2020-10, Vol.47 (9-10), p.829-843
Hauptverfasser: Xu, Shanhui, Li, Yanran
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container_title Journal of industrial microbiology & biotechnology
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creator Xu, Shanhui
Li, Yanran
description With the rapid development of synthetic biology and metabolic engineering technologies, yeast has been generally considered as promising hosts for the bioproduction of secondary metabolites. Sterols are essential components of cell membrane, and are the precursors for the biosynthesis of steroid hormones, signaling molecules, and defense molecules in the higher eukaryotes, which are of pharmaceutical and agricultural significance. In this mini-review, we summarize the recent engineering efforts of using yeast to synthesize various steroids, and discuss the structural diversity that the current steroid-producing yeast can achieve, the challenge and the potential of using yeast as the bioproduction platform of various steroids from higher eukaryotes.
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subjects Agricultural engineering
Biochemistry
Bioinformatics
Biomedical and Life Sciences
Biosynthesis
Biotechnology
Cell membranes
Eukaryotes
Genetic Engineering
Hormones
Inorganic Chemistry
Life Sciences
Metabolic Engineering
Metabolic Engineering and Synthetic Biology - Mini Review
Metabolites
Microbiology
Reviews
Saccharomyces cerevisiae - metabolism
Secondary metabolites
Steroid hormones
Steroids
Sterols
Sterols - chemistry
Synthetic Biology
Yeast
Yeasts
title Yeast as a promising heterologous host for steroid bioproduction
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