Peter H. Winegar , Graham A. Hudson , Luisa B. Dell , Maria C.T. Astolfi , James Reed , Rocky D. Payet , Hugo C.J. Ombredane , Anthony T. Iavarone , Yan Chen , Jennifer W. Gin , Christopher J. Petzold , Anne E. Osbourn , Jay D. Keasling
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Therefore, cyclopamine is an important drug candidate/lead to treat human diseases that are associated with dysregulated Hh signaling, such as basal cell carcinoma and acute myeloid leukemia. Cyclopamine and its semi-synthetic derivatives have been studied in (pre)clinical trials as Hh inhibitor-based drugs. However, challenges in scaling the production of cyclopamine have slowed efforts to improve its efficacy and safety profile through (bio)synthetic derivatization, often limiting drug development to synthetic analogs of cyclopamine such as the FDA-approved drugs Odomzo, Daurismo, and Erivedge. If a platform for the scalable and sustainable production of cyclopamine were established, then its (bio)synthetic derivatization, clinical development, and, ultimately, widespread distribution could be accelerated. Ongoing efforts to achieve this goal include the biosynthesis of cyclopamine in <em>Veratrum</em> plant cell culture and the semi-/total chemical synthesis of cyclopamine. Herein, this work advances efforts towards a promising future approach: the biosynthesis of cyclopamine in engineered microorganisms. We completed the heterologous microbial production of verazine (biosynthetic precursor to cyclopamine) from simple sugars (<em>i.e.</em>, glucose and galactose) in engineered <em>Saccharomyces cerevisiae</em> (<em>S. cerevisiae</em>) through the inducible upregulation of the native yeast mevalonate and lanosterol biosynthetic pathways, diversion of biosynthetic flux from ergosterol (<em>i.e.</em>, native sterol in <em>S. cerevisiae</em>) to cholesterol (<em>i.e.</em>, biosynthetic precursor to verazine), and expression of a refactored five-step verazine biosynthetic pathway. The engineered <em>S. cerevisiae</em> strain that produced verazine contains eight heterologous enzymes sourced from seven different species. Importantly, <em>S. cerevisiae</em>-produced verazine was indistinguishable via liquid chromatography-mass spectrometry from both a commercial standard (<em>Veratrum</em> spp. plant-produced) and <em>Nicotiana benthamiana</em>-produced verazine. To the best of our knowledge, this is the first report describing the heterologous production of a steroidal alkaloid in an engineered yeast. Verazine production was ultimately increased through design-build-test-learn cycles to a final titer of 83 ± 3 μg/L (4.1 ± 0.1 μg/g DCW). 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引用次数: 0
摘要
甾体生物碱是美国 FDA 批准的药物(如 Zytiga),也是很有前途的候选药物/先导药物(如环丙胺);然而,在已知的≥ 697 种甾体生物碱天然产物中,有许多仍未被充分利用作为药物,因为在其生产生物体中扩大其生物合成具有挑战性。环丙胺是一种由玉米百合(Veratrum spp.)植物产生的甾体生物碱,是刺猬(Hh)信号通路的抑制剂。因此,环丙胺是治疗与 Hh 信号传导失调有关的人类疾病(如基底细胞癌和急性髓性白血病)的重要候选药物/先导药物。作为基于 Hh 抑制剂的药物,环丙胺及其半合成衍生物已在(预)临床试验中得到研究。然而,由于环丙胺的规模化生产面临挑战,通过(生物)合成衍生物来提高其疗效和安全性的工作进展缓慢,药物开发往往局限于环丙胺的合成类似物,如美国 FDA 批准的药物 Odomzo、Daurismo 和 Erivedge。如果能够建立一个可扩展和可持续生产环丙胺的平台,就可以加快环丙胺的(生物)合成衍生、临床开发和最终的广泛传播。为实现这一目标,目前正在进行的工作包括在马鞭草植物细胞培养中生物合成环丙胺以及环丙胺的半/全化学合成。在此,本研究工作将努力推进一种前景广阔的未来方法:在工程微生物中生物合成环丙胺。我们通过诱导上调原生酵母的甲羟戊酸和羊毛甾醇生物合成途径,将麦角甾醇(S. cerevisiae酵母中的原生甾醇)的生物合成通量从麦角甾醇(S. cerevisiae酵母中的原生甾醇)转移到麦角甾醇(S. cerevisiae酵母中的原生甾醇)的生物合成通量,完成了在工程微生物中从单糖(即葡萄糖和半乳糖)异源生产verazine(环丙胺的生物合成前体)的过程、麦角固醇(即 S. cerevisiae 中的原生固醇)转向胆固醇(即吠嗪的生物合成前体),并表达经过重构的五步吠嗪生物合成途径。生产出维拉津的工程化 S. cerevisiae 菌株含有来自七个不同物种的八种异源酶。重要的是,通过液相色谱-质谱分析,S. cerevisiae 生产的verazine与商业标准(马鞭草属植物生产的)和烟草生产的verazine没有区别。据我们所知,这是第一份描述工程酵母异源生产甾体生物碱的报告。通过 "设计-构建-测试-学习 "循环,薇拉嗪的产量最终提高到 83 ± 3 μg/L(4.1 ± 0.1 μg/g DCW)。这项研究为今后微生物生物合成环丙胺、环丙胺的(生物)合成衍生物以及其他甾体生物碱天然产物奠定了基础。
Verazine biosynthesis from simple sugars in engineered Saccharomyces cerevisiae
Steroidal alkaloids are FDA-approved drugs (e.g., Zytiga) and promising drug candidates/leads (e.g., cyclopamine); yet many of the ≥697 known steroidal alkaloid natural products remain underutilized as drugs because it can be challenging to scale their biosynthesis in their producing organisms. Cyclopamine is a steroidal alkaloid produced by corn lily (Veratrum spp.) plants, and it is an inhibitor of the Hedgehog (Hh) signaling pathway. Therefore, cyclopamine is an important drug candidate/lead to treat human diseases that are associated with dysregulated Hh signaling, such as basal cell carcinoma and acute myeloid leukemia. Cyclopamine and its semi-synthetic derivatives have been studied in (pre)clinical trials as Hh inhibitor-based drugs. However, challenges in scaling the production of cyclopamine have slowed efforts to improve its efficacy and safety profile through (bio)synthetic derivatization, often limiting drug development to synthetic analogs of cyclopamine such as the FDA-approved drugs Odomzo, Daurismo, and Erivedge. If a platform for the scalable and sustainable production of cyclopamine were established, then its (bio)synthetic derivatization, clinical development, and, ultimately, widespread distribution could be accelerated. Ongoing efforts to achieve this goal include the biosynthesis of cyclopamine in Veratrum plant cell culture and the semi-/total chemical synthesis of cyclopamine. Herein, this work advances efforts towards a promising future approach: the biosynthesis of cyclopamine in engineered microorganisms. We completed the heterologous microbial production of verazine (biosynthetic precursor to cyclopamine) from simple sugars (i.e., glucose and galactose) in engineered Saccharomyces cerevisiae (S. cerevisiae) through the inducible upregulation of the native yeast mevalonate and lanosterol biosynthetic pathways, diversion of biosynthetic flux from ergosterol (i.e., native sterol in S. cerevisiae) to cholesterol (i.e., biosynthetic precursor to verazine), and expression of a refactored five-step verazine biosynthetic pathway. The engineered S. cerevisiae strain that produced verazine contains eight heterologous enzymes sourced from seven different species. Importantly, S. cerevisiae-produced verazine was indistinguishable via liquid chromatography-mass spectrometry from both a commercial standard (Veratrum spp. plant-produced) and Nicotiana benthamiana-produced verazine. To the best of our knowledge, this is the first report describing the heterologous production of a steroidal alkaloid in an engineered yeast. Verazine production was ultimately increased through design-build-test-learn cycles to a final titer of 83 ± 3 μg/L (4.1 ± 0.1 μg/g DCW). Together, this research lays the groundwork for future microbial biosynthesis of cyclopamine, (bio)synthetic derivatives of cyclopamine, and other steroidal alkaloid natural products.
期刊介绍:
Metabolic Engineering (MBE) is a journal that focuses on publishing original research papers on the directed modulation of metabolic pathways for metabolite overproduction or the enhancement of cellular properties. It welcomes papers that describe the engineering of native pathways and the synthesis of heterologous pathways to convert microorganisms into microbial cell factories. The journal covers experimental, computational, and modeling approaches for understanding metabolic pathways and manipulating them through genetic, media, or environmental means. Effective exploration of metabolic pathways necessitates the use of molecular biology and biochemistry methods, as well as engineering techniques for modeling and data analysis. MBE serves as a platform for interdisciplinary research in fields such as biochemistry, molecular biology, applied microbiology, cellular physiology, cellular nutrition in health and disease, and biochemical engineering. The journal publishes various types of papers, including original research papers and review papers. It is indexed and abstracted in databases such as Scopus, Embase, EMBiology, Current Contents - Life Sciences and Clinical Medicine, Science Citation Index, PubMed/Medline, CAS and Biotechnology Citation Index.