4.6 Article

Transcriptomic Insight into Terpenoid Biosynthesis and Functional Characterization of Three Diterpene Synthases in Scutellaria barbata

Journal

MOLECULES
Volume 23, Issue 11, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/molecules23112952

Keywords

Scutellaria barbata; transcriptomics analysis; terpenoid backbone biosynthesis; terpene synthase; diterpene synthase

Funding

  1. key project at central government level: The ability establishment of sustainable use for valuable Chinese medicine resources [2060302]
  2. National Natural Science Foundation of China [81822046]

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Scutellaria barbata (Lamiaceae) is an important medicinal herb widely used in China, Korea, India, and other Asian countries. Neo-clerodane diterpenoids are the largest known group of Scutellaria diterpenoids and show promising cytotoxic activity against several cancer cell lines. Here, Illumina-based deep transcriptome analysis of flowers, the aerial parts (leaf and stem), and roots of S. barbata was used to explore terpenoid-related genes. In total, 121,958,564 clean RNA-sequence reads were assembled into 88,980 transcripts, with an average length of 1370 nt and N50 length of 2144 nt, indicating high assembly quality. We identified nearly all known terpenoid-related genes (33 genes) involved in biosynthesis of the terpenoid backbone and 14 terpene synthase genes which generate skeletons for different terpenoids. Three full length diterpene synthase genes were functionally identified using an in vitro assay. SbTPS8 and SbTPS9 were identified as normal-CPP and ent-CPP synthase, respectively. SbTPS12 reacts with SbTPS8 to produce miltiradiene. Furthermore, SbTPS12 was proven to be a less promiscuous class I diterpene synthase. These results give a comprehensive understanding of the terpenoid biosynthesis in S. barbata and provide useful information for enhancing the production of bioactive neo-clerodane diterpenoids through genetic engineering.

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