4.8 Article

Discovery and Engineering of the Cocaine Biosynthetic Pathway

Journal

JOURNAL OF THE AMERICAN CHEMICAL SOCIETY
Volume 144, Issue 48, Pages 22000-22007

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/jacs.2c09091

Keywords

-

Funding

  1. National Key R&D Program of China
  2. National Natural Science Foundation of China
  3. Strategic Priority Research Program of the CAS
  4. Key Research Program of Frontier Sciences of the CAS
  5. Yunnan Provincial Science and Technology Department
  6. [2018YFA0900600]
  7. [82225043]
  8. [U1902212]
  9. [32000239]
  10. [XDB27020205]
  11. [QYZDB-SSW-SMC051]
  12. [2019FJ007]
  13. [2019ZF011-2]

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This study identifies two key enzymes involved in the biosynthesis of cocaine and reveals the complete pathway for the synthesis of the tropane skeleton. It provides new insights into the metabolic networks of tropane alkaloids in plants and enables the heterologous synthesis of tropane alkaloids in other organisms, with significant implications for pharmaceutical production.
Cocaine, the archetypal tropane alkaloid from the plant genus Erythroxylum, has recently been used clinically as a topical anesthesia of the mucous membranes. Despite this, the key biosynthetic step of the requisite tropane skeleton (methylecgonone) from the identified inter -mediate 4-(1-methyl-2-pyrrolidinyl)-3-oxobutanoic acid (MPOA) has remained, until this point, unknown. Herein, we identify two missing enzymes (EnCYP81AN15 and EnMT4) necessary for the biosynthesis of the tropane skeleton in cocaine by transient expression of the candidate genes in Nicotiana benthamiana. Cytochrome P450 EnCYP81AN15 was observed to selectively mediate the oxidative cyclization of S-MPOA to yield the unstable intermediate ecgonone, which was then methylated to form optically active methylecgonone by methyltransferase EnMT4 in Erythrox-ylum novogranatense. The establishment of this pathway corrects the long-standing (but incorrect) biosynthetic hypothesis of MPOA methylation first and oxidative cyclization second. Notably, the de novo reconstruction of cocaine was realized in N. benthamiana with the two newly identified genes, as well as four already known ones. This study not only reports a near-complete biosynthetic pathway of cocaine and provides new insights into the metabolic networks of tropane alkaloids (cocaine and hyoscyamine) in plants but also enables the heterologous synthesis of tropane alkaloids in other (micro)organisms, entailing significant implications for pharmaceutical production.

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