Cook Taylor B, Pfleger Brian F
Department of Chemical and Biological Engineering , University of Wisconsin-Madison , 1415 Engineering Dr. Room 3629 , Madison , WI 53706 , USA . Email:
Medchemcomm. 2019 Apr 25;10(5):668-681. doi: 10.1039/c9md00055k. eCollection 2019 May 1.
Bacteria have historically been a rich source of natural products ( polyketides and non-ribosomal peptides) that possess medically-relevant activities. Despite extensive discovery programs in both industry and academia, a plethora of biosynthetic pathways remain uncharacterized and the corresponding molecular products untested for potential bioactivities. This knowledge gap comes in part from the fact that many putative natural product producers have not been cultured in conventional laboratory settings in which the corresponding products are produced at detectable levels. Next-generation sequencing technologies are further increasing the knowledge gap by obtaining metagenomic sequence information from complex communities where production of the desired compound cannot be isolated in the laboratory. For these reasons, many groups are turning to synthetic biology to produce putative natural products in heterologous hosts. This strategy depends on the ability to heterologously express putative biosynthetic gene clusters and produce relevant quantities of the corresponding products. Actinobacteria remain the most abundant source of natural products and the most promising heterologous hosts for natural product discovery and production. However, researchers are discovering more natural products from other groups of bacteria, such as myxobacteria and cyanobacteria. Therefore, phylogenetically similar heterologous hosts have become promising candidates for synthesizing these novel molecules. The downside of working with these microbes is the lack of well-characterized genetic tools for optimizing expression of gene clusters and product titers. This review examines heterologous expression of natural product gene clusters in terms of the motivations for this research, the traits desired in an ideal host, tools available to the field, and a survey of recent progress.
从历史上看,细菌一直是具有医学相关活性的天然产物(聚酮化合物和非核糖体肽)的丰富来源。尽管工业界和学术界都开展了广泛的发现计划,但仍有大量生物合成途径未被表征,相应的分子产物也未进行潜在生物活性测试。这种知识差距部分源于许多假定的天然产物生产者尚未在传统实验室环境中培养,而在这种环境中相应产物的产量无法达到可检测水平。下一代测序技术通过从复杂群落中获取宏基因组序列信息进一步加大了知识差距,因为在实验室中无法分离出所需化合物的生产。出于这些原因,许多研究团队转向合成生物学,以便在异源宿主中生产假定的天然产物。这一策略依赖于异源表达假定生物合成基因簇并产生相应数量产物的能力。放线菌仍然是天然产物最丰富的来源,也是天然产物发现和生产最有前景的异源宿主。然而,研究人员正在从其他细菌群体(如粘细菌和蓝细菌)中发现更多天然产物。因此,系统发育相似的异源宿主已成为合成这些新分子的有希望的候选者。使用这些微生物的缺点是缺乏用于优化基因簇表达和产物滴度的充分表征的遗传工具。本综述从这项研究的动机、理想宿主所需的特性、该领域可用的工具以及对近期进展的调查等方面,审视了天然产物基因簇的异源表达。