4.4 Editorial Material

Microbial Cell Factories for Tetrahydroisoquinoline Alkaloid Production

Journal

CHEMBIOCHEM
Volume 22, Issue 4, Pages 639-641

Publisher

WILEY-V C H VERLAG GMBH
DOI: 10.1002/cbic.202000579

Keywords

bio-production; cell factories; metabolic engineering; tetrahydroisoquinoline alkaloids; yeast

Funding

  1. ARD2020 Biopharmaceutical program of the Region Centre Val de Loire (BioPROPHARM, CatharSIS and ETOPOCentre projects)
  2. La Ligue Contre le Cancer (Yeast4LiFE)
  3. le Studium (Consortium fellowship)

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Plants have long been a valuable source of natural products, but low accumulation of compounds in plants has been a challenge for production costs and supply. Recent advancements in metabolic engineering of microorganisms offer hope for the efficient production of these molecules at an industrial scale.
For decades, plants have represented an inexhaustible source of natural products used in various sectors such as health and industry. However, one recurring problem is the low accumulation of these compounds in planta and, therefore, their production costs and supply. In recent years, unprecedented hope has been brought by the metabolic engineering of microorganisms, which opens up prospects for supply of these molecules at lower cost with high added value. However, many of these productions remained at a laboratory scale. In a recent article published in Nature Communication, Vincent J. J. Martin's team has developed an optimized yeast strain capable of synthesizing not only a huge amount of (S)-reticuline, a major precursor of the plant tetrahydroisoquinoline alkaloid series, but also a whole range of new-to-nature compounds from this prominent family of natural products. This synthesis, reaching industrial scales, thus paves the way to efficient production in microbial cell factories.

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