Microbial Cell Factories (Dec 2012)

De novo production of the flavonoid naringenin in engineered <it>Saccharomyces cerevisiae</it>

  • Koopman Frank,
  • Beekwilder Jules,
  • Crimi Barbara,
  • van Houwelingen Adele,
  • Hall Robert D,
  • Bosch Dirk,
  • van Maris Antonius JA,
  • Pronk Jack T,
  • Daran Jean-Marc

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1186/1475-2859-11-155
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 11, no. 1
p. 155

Abstract

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Abstract Background Flavonoids comprise a large family of secondary plant metabolic intermediates that exhibit a wide variety of antioxidant and human health-related properties. Plant production of flavonoids is limited by the low productivity and the complexity of the recovered flavonoids. Thus to overcome these limitations, metabolic engineering of specific pathway in microbial systems have been envisaged to produce high quantity of a single molecules. Result Saccharomyces cerevisiae was engineered to produce the key intermediate flavonoid, naringenin, solely from glucose. For this, specific naringenin biosynthesis genes from Arabidopsis thaliana were selected by comparative expression profiling and introduced in S. cerevisiae. The sole expression of these A. thaliana genes yielded low extracellular naringenin concentrations ( Conclusion The results reported in this study demonstrate that S. cerevisiae is capable of de novo production of naringenin by coexpressing the naringenin production genes from A. thaliana and optimization of the flux towards the naringenin pathway. The engineered yeast naringenin production host provides a metabolic chassis for production of a wide range of flavonoids and exploration of their biological functions.

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