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Engineering the Biosynthesis of Late-Stage Vinblastine Precursors Precondylocarpine Acetate, Catharanthine, Tabersonine in <i>Nicotiana benthamiana</i>

Dagny Grzech, Benke Hong, Lorenzo Caputi, Prashant D. Sonawane, Sarah E. O’Connor

2022ACS Synthetic Biology34 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Vinblastine is a chemotherapy agent produced by the plant Catharanthus roseus in small quantities. Currently, vinblastine is sourced by isolation or semisynthesis. Nicotiana benthamiana is a plant heterologous host that can be used for reconstitution of biosynthetic pathways as an alternative natural product sourcing strategy. Recently, the biosynthesis of the late-stage vinblastine precursors precondylocarpine acetate, catharanthine, and tabersonine have been fully elucidated. However, the large number of enzymes involved in the pathway and the unstable nature of intermediates make the reconstitution of late-stage vinblastine precursor biosynthesis challenging. We used the N. benthamiana chassis and a state-of-art modular vector assembly to optimize the six biosynthetic steps leading to production of precondylocarpine acetate from the central intermediate strictosidine (∼2.7 mg per 1 g frozen tissue). After selecting the optimal regulatory element combination, we constructed four transcriptional unit assemblies and tested their efficiency. Finally, we successfully reconstituted the biosynthetic steps leading to production of catharanthine and tabersonine.

Topics & Concepts

Nicotiana benthamianaCatharanthus roseusBiosynthesisSemisynthesisVinblastineBiologyBiochemistryHeterologous expressionEnzymeRecombinant DNAGeneChemotherapyGeneticsPlant tissue culture and regenerationPlant Parasitism and ResistancePlant biochemistry and biosynthesis
Engineering the Biosynthesis of Late-Stage Vinblastine Precursors Precondylocarpine Acetate, Catharanthine, Tabersonine in <i>Nicotiana benthamiana</i> | Litcius