Artemisinin, a sesquiterpene lactone produced by Artemisia annua glandular secretory trichomes, is the active ingredient in the most effective treatment for malaria currently available. We identified a mutation that disrupts the amorpha-4,11-diene C-12 oxidase (CYP71AV1) enzyme, responsible for a series of oxidation reactions in the artemisinin biosynthetic pathway. Detailed metabolic studies of cyp71av1-1 revealed that the consequence of blocking the artemisinin biosynthetic pathway is the redirection of sesquiterpene metabolism to a sesquiterpene epoxide, which we designate arteannuin X. This sesquiterpene approaches half the concentration observed for artemisinin in wild-type plants, demonstrating high-flux plasticity in A. annua glandular trichomes and their potential as factories for the production of novel alternate sesquiterpenes at commercially viable levels. Detailed metabolite profiling of leaf maturation time-series and precursor-feeding experiments revealed that nonenzymatic conversion steps are central to both artemisinin and arteannuin X biosynthesis. In particular, feeding studies using 13C-labeled dihydroartemisinic acid (DHAA) provided strong evidence that the final steps in the synthesis of artemisinin are nonenzymatic in vivo. Our findings also suggest that the specialized subapical cavity of glandular secretory trichomes functions as a location for both the chemical conversion and the storage of phytotoxic compounds, including artemisinin. We conclude that metabolic engineering to produce high yields of novel secondary compounds such as sesquiterpenes is feasible in complex glandular trichomes. Such systems offer advantages over single-cell microbial hosts for production of toxic natural products.
Treatment of artemisinin 1 with acid leads to either a cyclohexane dione degradation product 10, which is a useful intermediate for biosynthetic studies of artemisinin, or to a decalin system which has undergone epimerization 8. It is shown by NMR spectroscopy, chemical reactions and molecular modelling that the bulky 7-substituent in the epimerized decalin series (8, 17, 14) adopts an axial solution conformation and that this is thermodynamically favoured over the natural configuration for which this substituent is equatorial (11, 15, 13). Conversely, for the cyclohexane dione series, the natural configuration in which the 7-substituent is equatorial is more favoured. Reasons for the differing conformational preferences in the two series, which are ultimately responsible for promoting epimerization, are discussed and a simple spectroscopic procedure for identification of epimerized products is presented.