28 research outputs found

    Biosynthesis of isoprenoids, polyunsaturated fatty acids and flavonoids in Saccharomyces cerevisiae

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    Industrial biotechnology employs the controlled use of microorganisms for the production of synthetic chemicals or simple biomass that can further be used in a diverse array of applications that span the pharmaceutical, chemical and nutraceutical industries. Recent advances in metagenomics and in the incorporation of entire biosynthetic pathways into Saccharomyces cerevisiae have greatly expanded both the fitness and the repertoire of biochemicals that can be synthesized from this popular microorganism. Further, the availability of the S. cerevisiae entire genome sequence allows the application of systems biology approaches for improving its enormous biosynthetic potential. In this review, we will describe some of the efforts on using S. cerevisiae as a cell factory for the biosynthesis of high-value natural products that belong to the families of isoprenoids, flavonoids and long chain polyunsaturated fatty acids. As natural products are increasingly becoming the center of attention of the pharmaceutical and nutraceutical industries, the use of S. cerevisiae for their production is only expected to expand in the future, further allowing the biosynthesis of novel molecular structures with unique properties

    Probing Selectivity and Creating Structural Diversity Through Hybrid Polyketide Synthases

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    Engineering polyketide synthases (PKS) to produce new metabolites requires an understanding of catalytic points of failure during substrate processing. Growing evidence indicates the thioesterase (TE) domain as a significant bottleneck within engineered PKS systems. We created a series of hybrid PKS modules bearing exchanged TE domains from heterologous pathways and challenged them with both native and non‐native polyketide substrates. Reactions pairing wildtype PKS modules with non‐native substrates primarily resulted in poor conversions to anticipated macrolactones. Likewise, product formation with native substrates and hybrid PKS modules bearing non‐cognate TE domains was severely reduced. In contrast, non‐native substrates were converted by most hybrid modules containing a substrate compatible TE, directly implicating this domain as the major catalytic gatekeeper and highlighting its value as a target for protein engineering to improve analog production in PKS pathways.Improved catalysis with engineered polyketide synthases: Pairing wild‐type polyketide synthases with non‐native substrates largely failed to produce the anticipated products. A series of hybrid modules bearing heterologous thioesterase domains were generated and employed to alleviate the observed catalytic bottleneck, resulting in the efficient processing of non‐native substrates and an unexpected path to product diversity.Peer Reviewedhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/156208/3/anie202004991-sup-0001-misc_information.pdfhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/156208/2/anie202004991_am.pdfhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/156208/1/anie202004991.pd

    Probing Selectivity and Creating Structural Diversity Through Hybrid Polyketide Synthases

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    Engineering polyketide synthases (PKS) to produce new metabolites requires an understanding of catalytic points of failure during substrate processing. Growing evidence indicates the thioesterase (TE) domain as a significant bottleneck within engineered PKS systems. We created a series of hybrid PKS modules bearing exchanged TE domains from heterologous pathways and challenged them with both native and non‐native polyketide substrates. Reactions pairing wildtype PKS modules with non‐native substrates primarily resulted in poor conversions to anticipated macrolactones. Likewise, product formation with native substrates and hybrid PKS modules bearing non‐cognate TE domains was severely reduced. In contrast, non‐native substrates were converted by most hybrid modules containing a substrate compatible TE, directly implicating this domain as the major catalytic gatekeeper and highlighting its value as a target for protein engineering to improve analog production in PKS pathways.Improved catalysis with engineered polyketide synthases: Pairing wild‐type polyketide synthases with non‐native substrates largely failed to produce the anticipated products. A series of hybrid modules bearing heterologous thioesterase domains were generated and employed to alleviate the observed catalytic bottleneck, resulting in the efficient processing of non‐native substrates and an unexpected path to product diversity.Peer Reviewedhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/156161/2/ange202004991-sup-0001-misc_information.pdfhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/156161/1/ange202004991.pdfhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/156161/3/ange202004991_am.pd

    A human MUTYH variant linking colonic polyposis to redox degradation of the [4Fe4S]²⁺ cluster

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    The human DNA repair enzyme MUTYH excises mispaired adenine residues in oxidized DNA. Homozygous MUTYH mutations underlie the autosomal, recessive cancer syndrome MUTYH-associated polyposis. We report a MUTYH variant, p.C306W (c.918C>G), with a tryptophan residue in place of native cysteine, that ligates the [4Fe4S] cluster in a patient with colonic polyposis and family history of early age colon cancer. In bacterial MutY, the [4Fe4S] cluster is redox active, allowing rapid localization to target lesions by long-range, DNA-mediated signalling. In the current study, using DNA electrochemistry, we determine that wild-type MUTYH is similarly redox-active, but MUTYH C306W undergoes rapid oxidative degradation of its cluster to [3Fe4S]^+, with loss of redox signalling. In MUTYH C306W, oxidative cluster degradation leads to decreased DNA binding and enzyme function. This study confirms redox activity in eukaryotic DNA repair proteins and establishes MUTYH C306W as a pathogenic variant, highlighting the essential role of redox signalling by the [4Fe4S] cluster

    A human MUTYH variant linking colonic polyposis to redox degradation of the [4Fe4S]²⁺ cluster

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    The human DNA repair enzyme MUTYH excises mispaired adenine residues in oxidized DNA. Homozygous MUTYH mutations underlie the autosomal, recessive cancer syndrome MUTYH-associated polyposis. We report a MUTYH variant, p.C306W (c.918C>G), with a tryptophan residue in place of native cysteine, that ligates the [4Fe4S] cluster in a patient with colonic polyposis and family history of early age colon cancer. In bacterial MutY, the [4Fe4S] cluster is redox active, allowing rapid localization to target lesions by long-range, DNA-mediated signalling. In the current study, using DNA electrochemistry, we determine that wild-type MUTYH is similarly redox-active, but MUTYH C306W undergoes rapid oxidative degradation of its cluster to [3Fe4S]^+, with loss of redox signalling. In MUTYH C306W, oxidative cluster degradation leads to decreased DNA binding and enzyme function. This study confirms redox activity in eukaryotic DNA repair proteins and establishes MUTYH C306W as a pathogenic variant, highlighting the essential role of redox signalling by the [4Fe4S] cluster

    Improving NADPH availability for natural product biosynthesis in Escherichia coli by metabolic engineering.

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    a b s t r a c t With microbial production becoming the primary choice for natural product synthesis, increasing precursor and cofactor availability has become a chief hurdle for the generation of efficient production platforms. As such, we employed a stoichiometric-based model to identify combinations of gene knockouts for improving NADPH availability in Escherichia coli. Specifically, two different model objectives were used to identify possible genotypes that exhibited either improved overall NADPH production or an improved flux through an artificial reaction coupling NADPH yield to biomass. The top single, double and triple gene deletion candidates were constructed and as a case study evaluated for their ability to produce two polyphenols, leucocyanidin and (+)-catechin. Each is derived from their common precursor dihydroquercetin using two recombinant NADPH-dependent enzymes: dihydroflavonol 4-reductase and leucoanthocyanidin reductase. The best engineered strain carrying Dpgi, Dppc and DpldA deletions accumulated up to 817 mg/L of leucocyanidin and 39 mg/L (+)-catechin in batch culture with 10 g/L glucose in modified M9 medium, a 4-fold and 2-fold increase, respectively, compared to the wild-type control

    Standardized biosynthesis of flavan-3-ols with effects on pancreatic beta-cell insulin secretion,”

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    Abstract Flavan-3-ols, such as green tea catechins represent a major group of phenolic compounds with significant medicinal properties. We describe the construction and optimization of Escherichia coli recombinant strains for the production of mono-and dihydroxylated catechins from their flavanone and phenylpropanoid acid precursors. Use of glucose minimal medium, Fe(II), and control of oxygen availability during shake-flask experiments resulted in production yield increases. Additional production improvement resulted from the use of medium rather than high-copy number plasmids and, in the case of monohydroxylated compounds, the addition of extracellular cofactors in the culture medium. The established metabolic engineering approach allowed the biosynthesis of natural catechins at high purity for assessing their possible insulinotropic effects in pancreatic β-cell cultures. We demonstrated that (+)-afzelechin and (+)-catechin modulated the secretion of insulin by pancreatic β-cells. These results indicate the potential of applying metabolic engineering approaches for the synthesis of natural and non-natural catechin analogues as drug candidates in diabetes treatments

    Metabolic Engineering of Anthocyanin Biosynthesis in Escherichia coli

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    Anthocyanins are red, purple, or blue plant pigments that belong to the family of polyphenolic compounds collectively called flavonoids. Their demonstrated antioxidant properties and economic importance to the dye, fruit, and cut-flower industries have driven intensive research into their metabolic biosynthetic pathways. In order to produce stable, glycosylated anthocyanins from colorless flavanones such as naringenin and eriodictyol, a four-step metabolic pathway was constructed that contained plant genes from heterologous origins: flavanone 3β-hydroxylase from Malus domestica, dihydroflavonol 4-reductase from Anthurium andraeanum, anthocyanidin synthase (ANS) also from M. domestica, and UDP-glucose:flavonoid 3-O-glucosyltransferase from Petunia hybrida. Using two rounds of PCR, each one of the four genes was first placed under the control of the trc promoter and its own bacterial ribosome-binding site and then cloned sequentially into vector pK184. Escherichia coli cells containing the recombinant plant pathway were able to take up either naringenin or eriodictyol and convert it to the corresponding glycosylated anthocyanin, pelargonidin 3-O-glucoside or cyanidin 3-O-glucoside. The produced anthocyanins were present at low concentrations, while most of the metabolites detected corresponded to their dihydroflavonol precursors, as well as the corresponding flavonols. The presence of side product flavonols is at least partly due to an alternate reaction catalyzed by ANS. This is the first time plant-specific anthocyanins have been produced from a microorganism and opens up the possibility of further production improvement by protein and pathway engineering

    Chemistry & Biology Article A Versatile Microbial System for Biosynthesis of Novel Polyphenols with Altered Estrogen Receptor Binding Activity

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    SUMMARY Isoflavonoids possess enormous potential for human health with potential impact on heart disease and cancer, and some display striking affinities for steroid receptors. Synthesized primarily by legumes, isoflavonoids are present in low and variable abundance within complex mixtures, complicating efforts to assess their clinical potential. To satisfy the need for controlled, efficient, and flexible biosynthesis of isoflavonoids, a three-enzyme system has been constructed in yeast that can convert natural and synthetic flavanones into their corresponding isoflavones in practical quantities. Based on the determination of the substrate requirements of isoflavone synthase, a series of natural and nonnatural isoflavones were prepared and their binding affinities for the human estrogen receptors (ERa and ERb) were determined. Structure activity relationships are suggested based on changes to binding affinities related to small variations on the isoflavone structure
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