Mycotoxin contamination causes disease and death in both humans and animals. Monascus Red, produced by Monascus purpureus, is used as a food colorant. However, its application is limited by contamination of the nephrotoxin citrinin, which is also produced by the fungus. Suppressing citrinin production by genetic engineering is difficult in a polykaryotic fungus such as M. purpureus. Hence, we developed a CRISPR/Cas system to delete large genomic fragments in polykaryotic fungi. Protoplast preparation and regeneration were optimized, and a dual-plasmid CRISPR/Cas system was designed to enable the deletion of the 15-kb citrinin biosynthetic gene cluster in M. purpureus industrial strain KL-001. The obtained homokaryotic mutants were stable, and citrinin was unambiguously eliminated. Moreover, the Monascus Red pigment production was increased by 2–5%. Our approach provides a powerful solution to solve this long-standing problem in the food industry and enables engineering of polykaryotic fungi for mycotoxin eliminations.
Microbial cell factories (MCFs) and cell-free systems (CFSs) are generally considered as two unrelated approaches for the biosynthesis of biomolecules. In the current study, two systems were combined together for the overproduction of agroclavine (AC), a structurally complex ergot alkaloid. The whole biosynthetic pathway for AC was split into the early pathway and the late pathway at the point of the FAD-linked oxidoreductase EasE, which was reconstituted in an MCF (Aspergillus nidulans) and a four-enzyme CFS, respectively. The final titer of AC of this combined system is 1209 mg/L, which is the highest one that has been reported so far, to the best of our knowledge. The development of such a combined route could potentially avoid the limitations of both MCF and CFS systems, and boost the production of complex ergot alkaloids with polycyclic ring systems.
Since imine reductases (IREDs) were reported to catalyze the reductive amination reactions, they became particularly attractive for producing chiral amines. Though diverse ketones and aldehydes have been proved to be excellent substrates of IREDs, bulky amines have been rarely transformed. Here we report the usage of an Increasing-Molecule-Volume-Screening to identify a group of IREDs (IR-G02, 21, and 35) competent for accepting bulky amine substrates. IR-G02 shows an excellent substrate scope, which is applied to synthesize over 135 amine molecules as well as a range of APIs' substructures. The crystal structure of IR-G02 reveals the determinants for altering the substrate preference. Finally, we demonstrate a gram-scale synthesis of an analogue of the API sensipar via a kinetic resolution approach, which displays ee >99%, total turnover numbers of up to 2087, and space time yield up to 18.10 g L-1 d-1.
Abstract Ergot alkaloids (EAs) are a diverse group of indole alkaloids known for their complex structures, significant pharmacological effects, and toxicity to plants. The biosynthesis of these compounds begins with chanoclavine-I aldehyde (CC aldehyde, 2 ), an important intermediate produced by the enzyme EasD af or its counterpart FgaDH from chanoclavine-I (CC, 1 ). However, how CC aldehyde 2 is converted to chanoclavine-I acid (CC acid, 3 ), first isolated from Ipomoea violacea several decades ago, is still unclear. In this study, we provide in vitro biochemical evidence showing that EasD af not only converts CC 1 to CC aldehyde 2 but also directly transforms CC 1 into CC acid 3 through two sequential oxidations. Molecular docking and site-directed mutagenesis experiments confirmed the crucial role of two amino acids, Y166 and S153, within the active site, which suggests that Y166 acts as a general base for hydride transfer, while S153 facilitates proton transfer, thereby increasing the acidity of the reaction. Key points • EAs possess complicated skeletons and are widely used in several clinical diseases • EasD af belongs to the short-chain dehydrogenases/reductases (SDRs) and converted CC or CC aldehyde to CC acid • The catalytic mechanism of EasD af for dehydrogenation was analyzed by molecular docking and site mutations
A dedicated enzyme for the formation of the central C ring in the tetracyclic ergoline of clinically important ergot alkaloids has never been found. Herein, we report a dual role catalase (EasC), unexpectedly using O2 as the oxidant, that catalyzes the oxidative cyclization of the central C ring from a 1,3-diene intermediate. Our study showcases how nature evolves the common catalase for enantioselective C–C bond construction of complex polycyclic scaffolds.