iridoids has been researched along with catharanthine* in 2 studies
2 other study(ies) available for iridoids and catharanthine
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Strategies for engineering plant natural products: the iridoid-derived monoterpene indole alkaloids of Catharanthus roseus.
The manipulation of pathways to make unnatural variants of natural compounds, a process often termed combinatorial biosynthesis, has been robustly successful in prokaryotic systems. The development of approaches to generate new-to-nature compounds from plant-based pathways is, in comparison, much less advanced. Success will depend on the specific chemistry of the pathway, as well as on the suitability of the plant system for transformation and genetic manipulation. As plant pathways are elucidated, and can be heterologously expressed in hosts that are more amenable to genetic manipulation, biosynthetic production of new-to-nature compounds from plant pathways will become more widespread. In this chapter, some of the key strategies that have been developed for metabolic engineering of plant pathways, namely directed biosynthesis, mutasynthesis, and pathway incorporation of engineered enzymes are highlighted. The iridoid-derived monoterpene indole alkaloids from C. roseus, which are the focus of this chapter, provide an excellent system for developing these strategies. Topics: Biological Products; Biosynthetic Pathways; Carbon-Nitrogen Lyases; Catharanthus; Culture Media; Indole Alkaloids; Iridoid Glucosides; Iridoids; Metabolic Engineering; Monoterpenes; Mutagenesis, Site-Directed; Plant Proteins; Plasmids; Tryptamines; Vinca Alkaloids | 2012 |
The leaf epidermome of Catharanthus roseus reveals its biochemical specialization.
Catharanthus roseus is the sole commercial source of the monoterpenoid indole alkaloids (MIAs), vindoline and catharanthine, components of the commercially important anticancer dimers, vinblastine and vincristine. Carborundum abrasion technique was used to extract leaf epidermis-enriched mRNA, thus sampling the epidermome, or complement, of proteins expressed in the leaf epidermis. Random sequencing of the derived cDNA library established 3655 unique ESTs, composed of 1142 clusters and 2513 singletons. Virtually all known MIA pathway genes were found in this remarkable set of ESTs, while only four known genes were found in the publicly available Catharanthus EST data set. Several novel MIA pathway candidate genes were identified, as demonstrated by the cloning and functional characterization of loganic acid O-methyltransferase involved in secologanin biosynthesis. The pathways for triterpene biosynthesis were also identified, and metabolite analysis showed that oleanane-type triterpenes were localized exclusively to the cuticular wax layer. The pathways for flavonoid and very-long-chain fatty acid biosynthesis were also located in this cell type. The results illuminate the biochemical specialization of Catharanthus leaf epidermis for the production of multiple classes of metabolites. The value and versatility of this EST data set for biochemical and biological analysis of leaf epidermal cells is also discussed. Topics: Amino Acid Sequence; Catharanthus; DNA, Complementary; Expressed Sequence Tags; Gene Expression Regulation, Plant; Gene Library; Iridoid Glucosides; Iridoids; Kinetics; Methyltransferases; Models, Biological; Molecular Sequence Data; Molecular Structure; Plant Epidermis; Plant Leaves; Sequence Analysis, DNA; Sequence Homology, Amino Acid; Substrate Specificity; Vinblastine; Vinca Alkaloids | 2008 |