5th International Conference on Plant Synthetic Biology, Bioengineering and Biotechnology
A Previously Unknown Biosynthetic Capacity of Chalcone Synthase Discovered By Heterologous Expression of a Putative Plant Biosynthetic Gene Cluster in Yeast
Authors
Here, we firstly identified a previously unknown amide biosynthetic pathway derived from tomato (Solanum lycopersicum) from predicted tomato BGC candidates. By expressing a putative tomato gene cluster in yeast (Saccharomyces cerevisiae), we identified two functionally related enzymes catalyzing cascaded amide biosynthetic reactions. The newly discovered pathway consists of a carboxyl methyltransferase (SlMT2), which methylates the primary metabolite 3-hydroxyanthranilic acid (3-HAA) to form a methyl ester, and a naringenin chalcone synthase (SlCHS), which catalyzes the condensation of 3-HAA methyl ester and p-coumaroylâcoenzyme A (CoA) through formation of an amide bond. The newly discovery nitrogen-carbon bond formation biocatalytic capacity of CHS is different from its well-characterized Polyketide Synthase activity that canonically catalyzes carbon-carbon bond formation through iterative decarboxylative Claisen condensation. We further demonstrated that this aminoacylation activity could be a common secondary activity in plant CHSs by validating the activity in vitro with variants from S. lycopersicum and Arabidopsis thaliana. Our work demonstrates yeast as a platform for characterizing putative plant gene clusters with the potential for compound structure and enzymatic activity discovery.