4.7 Review

Improving production of bioactive secondary metabolites in actinomycetes by metabolic engineering

Journal

METABOLIC ENGINEERING
Volume 10, Issue 5, Pages 281-292

Publisher

ACADEMIC PRESS INC ELSEVIER SCIENCE
DOI: 10.1016/j.ymben.2008.07.001

Keywords

Streptomyces; Metabolism; Antibiotic biosynthesis; Precursor engineering; Heterologous expression; Regulation; Ribosome engineering; Genome shuffling

Funding

  1. Spanish Ministry of Education and Science [BFU2006-00404, BIO2005-04115]
  2. Red Tematica de Investigacion Cooperativa de Centros de Cancer
  3. Ministry of Health, Spain [ISCIII-RETIC RD06/0020/0026]
  4. UE FP6 [005224]

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Production of secondary metabolites is a process influenced by several physico-chemical factors including nutrient supply, oxygenation, temperature and pH. These factors have been traditionally controlled and optimized in industrial fermentations in order to enhance metabolite production. In addition, traditional mutagenesis programs have been used by the pharmaceutical industry for strain and production yield improvement. In the last years, the development of recombinant DNA technology has provided new tools for approaching yields improvement by means of genetic manipulation of biosynthetic pathways. These efforts are usually focused in redirecting precursor metabolic fluxes, deregulation of biosynthetic pathways and overexpression of specific enzymes involved in metabolic bottlenecks. In addition, efforts have been made for the heterologous expression of biosynthetic gene clusters in other organisms, looking not only for an increase of production levels but also to speed the process by using rapidly growing and easy to manipulate organisms compared to the producing organism. In this review, we will focus on these genetic approaches as applied to bioactive secondary metabolites produced by actinomycetes. (C) 2008 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

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