Author: MarÃn, Laura; Gutiérrezâ€delâ€RÃo, Ignacio; Villar, Claudio Jesús; Lombó, Felipe
Title: De novo biosynthesis of garbanzol and fustin in Streptomyces albus based on a potential flavanone 3â€hydroxylase with 2â€hydroxylase side activity Cord-id: v60d913b Document date: 2021_7_3
ID: v60d913b
Snippet: Flavonoids are important plant secondary metabolites, which were shown to have antioxidant, antiâ€inflammatory or antiviral activities. Heterologous production of flavonoids in engineered microbial cell factories is an interesting alternative to their purification from plant material representing the natural source. The use of engineered bacteria allows to produce specific compounds, independent of soil, climatic or other plantâ€associated production parameters. The initial objective of this s
Document: Flavonoids are important plant secondary metabolites, which were shown to have antioxidant, antiâ€inflammatory or antiviral activities. Heterologous production of flavonoids in engineered microbial cell factories is an interesting alternative to their purification from plant material representing the natural source. The use of engineered bacteria allows to produce specific compounds, independent of soil, climatic or other plantâ€associated production parameters. The initial objective of this study was to achieve an engineered production of two interesting flavanonols, garbanzol and fustin, using Streptomyces albus as the production host. Unexpectedly, the engineered strain produced several flavones and flavonols in the absence of the additional expression of a flavone synthase (FNS) or flavonol synthase (FLS) gene. It turned out that the heterologous flavanone 3â€hydroxylase (F3H) has a 2â€hydroxylase side activity, which explains the observed production of 7,4′â€dihydroxyflavone, resokaempferol, kaempferol and apigenin, as well as the biosynthesis of the extremely rare 2â€hydroxylated intermediates 2â€hydroxyliquiritigenin, 2â€hydroxynaringenin and probably licodione. Other related metabolites, such as quercetin, dihydroquercetin and eriodictyol, have also been detected in culture extracts of this recombinant strain. Hence, the enzymatic versatility of S. albus can be conveniently exploited for the heterologous production of a large diversity of plant metabolites of the flavonoid family.
Search related documents:
Co phrase search for related documents, hyperlinks ordered by date