4.6 Review

The Biosynthetic Pathways of Tanshinones and Phenolic Acids in Salvia miltiorrhiza

Journal

MOLECULES
Volume 20, Issue 9, Pages 16235-16254

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/molecules200916235

Keywords

tanshinones; phenolic acids; Salvia miltiorrhiza; biosynthetic pathway; metabolic engineering

Funding

  1. National Natural Science Foundation of China [81130070, 81325023, 81573532, 81202871, 81403049]
  2. National High Technology Research and Development Program [2012AA02A704, SS2014AA022201]
  3. State Key Laboratory Breeding Base of Systematic Research, Development and Utilization of Chinese Medicine Resources
  4. National Science and Technology major projects [2013ZX09201020]

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Secondary metabolites from plants play key roles in human medicine and chemical industries. Due to limited accumulation of secondary metabolites in plants and their important roles, characterization of key enzymes involved in biosynthetic pathway will enable metabolic engineering or synthetic biology to improve or produce the compounds in plants or microorganisms, which provides an alternative for production of these valuable compounds. Salvia miltiorrhiza, containing tanshinones and phenolic acids as its active compounds, has been widely used for the treatment of cardiovascular and cerebrovascular diseases. The biosynthetic analysis of secondary metabolites in S. miltiorrhiza has made great progress due to the successful genetic transformation system, simplified hairy roots system, and high-throughput sequencing. The cloned genes in S. miltiorrhiza had provided references for functional characterization of the post-modification steps involved in biosynthesis of tanshinones and phenolic acids, and further utilization of these steps in metabolic engineering. The strategies used in these studies could provide solid foundation for elucidation of biosynthetic pathways of diterpenoids and phenolic acids in other species. The present review systematically summarizes recent advances in biosynthetic pathway analysis of tanshinones and phenolic acids as well as synthetic biology and metabolic engineering applications of the rate-limiting genes involved in the secondary metabolism in S. miltiorrhiza.

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