Metabolomics and genomics in natural products research: complementary tools for targeting new chemical entities

Covering: 2010 to 2021 Organisms in nature have evolved into proficient synthetic chemists, utilizing specialized enzymatic machinery to biosynthesize an inspiring diversity of secondary metabolites. Often serving to boost competitive advantage for their producers, these secondary metabolites have w...

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Veröffentlicht in:Natural product reports 2021-11, Vol.38 (11), p.241-265
Hauptverfasser: Caesar, Lindsay K, Montaser, Rana, Keller, Nancy P, Kelleher, Neil L
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container_end_page 265
container_issue 11
container_start_page 241
container_title Natural product reports
container_volume 38
creator Caesar, Lindsay K
Montaser, Rana
Keller, Nancy P
Kelleher, Neil L
description Covering: 2010 to 2021 Organisms in nature have evolved into proficient synthetic chemists, utilizing specialized enzymatic machinery to biosynthesize an inspiring diversity of secondary metabolites. Often serving to boost competitive advantage for their producers, these secondary metabolites have widespread human impacts as antibiotics, anti-inflammatories, and antifungal drugs. The natural products discovery field has begun a shift away from traditional activity-guided approaches and is beginning to take advantage of increasingly available metabolomics and genomics datasets to explore undiscovered chemical space. Major strides have been made and now enable -omics-informed prioritization of chemical structures for discovery, including the prospect of confidently linking metabolites to their biosynthetic pathways. Over the last decade, more integrated strategies now provide researchers with pipelines for simultaneous identification of expressed secondary metabolites and their biosynthetic machinery. However, continuous collaboration by the natural products community will be required to optimize strategies for effective evaluation of natural product biosynthetic gene clusters to accelerate discovery efforts. Here, we provide an evaluative guide to scientific literature as it relates to studying natural product biosynthesis using genomics, metabolomics, and their integrated datasets. Particular emphasis is placed on the unique insights that can be gained from large-scale integrated strategies, and we provide source organism-specific considerations to evaluate the gaps in our current knowledge. Here we provide a comprehensive guide for studying natural product biosynthesis using genomics, metabolomics, and their integrated datasets. We emphasize integrated strategies and provide a critical outlook on remaining challenges in the field.
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source MEDLINE; Royal Society Of Chemistry Journals 2008-; Alma/SFX Local Collection
subjects Antibiotics
Biological Products - metabolism
Biosynthesis
Biosynthetic Pathways
Chemists
Datasets
Drug Discovery
Fungicides
Gene clusters
Genomics
Genomics - methods
Human influences
Metabolites
Metabolomics
Metabolomics - methods
Multigene Family
Natural products
Secondary Metabolism
Secondary metabolites
title Metabolomics and genomics in natural products research: complementary tools for targeting new chemical entities
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