Frontiers in Bioengineering and Biotechnology (Feb 2021)

High-Level Patchoulol Biosynthesis in Artemisia annua L.

  • Xueqing Fu,
  • Fangyuan Zhang,
  • Fangyuan Zhang,
  • Yanan Ma,
  • Danial Hassani,
  • Bowen Peng,
  • Qifang Pan,
  • Yuhua Zhang,
  • Zhongxiang Deng,
  • Wenbo Liu,
  • Jixiu Zhang,
  • Lei Han,
  • Dongfang Chen,
  • Jingya Zhao,
  • Ling Li,
  • Xiaofen Sun,
  • Kexuan Tang

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3389/fbioe.2020.621127
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 8

Abstract

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Terpenes constitute the largest class of secondary metabolites in plants. Some terpenes are essential for plant growth and development, membrane components, and photosynthesis. Terpenes are also economically useful for industry, agriculture, and pharmaceuticals. However, there is very low content of most terpenes in microbes and plants. Chemical or microbial synthesis of terpenes are often costly. Plants have the elaborate and economic biosynthetic way of producing high-value terpenes through photosynthesis. Here we engineered the heterogenous sesquiterpenoid patchoulol production in A. annua. When using a strong promoter such as 35S to over express the avian farnesyl diphosphate synthase gene and patchoulol synthase gene, the highest content of patchoulol was 52.58 μg/g DW in transgenic plants. When altering the subcellular location of the introduced sesquiterpene synthetase via a signal peptide, the accumulation of patchoulol was observably increased to 273 μg/g DW. This case demonstrates that A. annua plant with glandular trichomes is a useful platform for synthetic biology studies.

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