Engineering Microbes for Plant Polyketide Biosynthesis

Polyketides are an important group of secondary metabolites, many of which have important industrial applications, including in the food and pharmaceutical industries. Polyketides are synthesized from one of three classes of enzymes differentiated by their biochemical features and product structure:...

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Main Authors: Vincent J. J. Martin, Jonathan E. Page, Zach Wiltshire, Francois-Xavier Lussier, David Colatriano
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Elsevier 2012-10-01
Series:Computational and Structural Biotechnology Journal
Online Access:http://journals.sfu.ca/rncsb/index.php/csbj/article/view/csbj.201210020
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spelling doaj-f14f3ffadbc24b7da7d76d1ba7e9982b2020-11-24T21:01:30ZengElsevierComputational and Structural Biotechnology Journal2001-03702012-10-0134e201210020Engineering Microbes for Plant Polyketide BiosynthesisVincent J. J. MartinJonathan E. PageZach WiltshireFrancois-Xavier LussierDavid ColatrianoPolyketides are an important group of secondary metabolites, many of which have important industrial applications, including in the food and pharmaceutical industries. Polyketides are synthesized from one of three classes of enzymes differentiated by their biochemical features and product structure: type I, type II or type III polyketide synthases (PKSs). Plant type III PKS enzymes, which will be the main focus of this review, are relatively small homodimeric proteins that catalyze iterative decarboxylative condensations of malonyl units with a CoA-linked starter molecule. This review will describe the plant type III polyketide synthetic pathway, including the synthesis of chalcones, stilbenes and curcuminoids, as well as recent work on the synthesis of these polyketides in heterologous organisms. The limitations and bottlenecks of heterologous expression as well as attempts at creating diversity through the synthesis of novel “unnatural” polyketides using type III PKSs will also be discussed. Although synthetic production of plant polyketides is still in its infancy, their potential as useful bioactive compounds makes them an extremely interesting area of study.http://journals.sfu.ca/rncsb/index.php/csbj/article/view/csbj.201210020
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Vincent J. J. Martin
Jonathan E. Page
Zach Wiltshire
Francois-Xavier Lussier
David Colatriano
spellingShingle Vincent J. J. Martin
Jonathan E. Page
Zach Wiltshire
Francois-Xavier Lussier
David Colatriano
Engineering Microbes for Plant Polyketide Biosynthesis
Computational and Structural Biotechnology Journal
author_facet Vincent J. J. Martin
Jonathan E. Page
Zach Wiltshire
Francois-Xavier Lussier
David Colatriano
author_sort Vincent J. J. Martin
title Engineering Microbes for Plant Polyketide Biosynthesis
title_short Engineering Microbes for Plant Polyketide Biosynthesis
title_full Engineering Microbes for Plant Polyketide Biosynthesis
title_fullStr Engineering Microbes for Plant Polyketide Biosynthesis
title_full_unstemmed Engineering Microbes for Plant Polyketide Biosynthesis
title_sort engineering microbes for plant polyketide biosynthesis
publisher Elsevier
series Computational and Structural Biotechnology Journal
issn 2001-0370
publishDate 2012-10-01
description Polyketides are an important group of secondary metabolites, many of which have important industrial applications, including in the food and pharmaceutical industries. Polyketides are synthesized from one of three classes of enzymes differentiated by their biochemical features and product structure: type I, type II or type III polyketide synthases (PKSs). Plant type III PKS enzymes, which will be the main focus of this review, are relatively small homodimeric proteins that catalyze iterative decarboxylative condensations of malonyl units with a CoA-linked starter molecule. This review will describe the plant type III polyketide synthetic pathway, including the synthesis of chalcones, stilbenes and curcuminoids, as well as recent work on the synthesis of these polyketides in heterologous organisms. The limitations and bottlenecks of heterologous expression as well as attempts at creating diversity through the synthesis of novel “unnatural” polyketides using type III PKSs will also be discussed. Although synthetic production of plant polyketides is still in its infancy, their potential as useful bioactive compounds makes them an extremely interesting area of study.
url http://journals.sfu.ca/rncsb/index.php/csbj/article/view/csbj.201210020
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