Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
6494699 | Metabolic Engineering | 2013 | 11 Pages |
Abstract
Ginsenosides are the primary bioactive components of ginseng, which is a popular medicinal herb and exhibits diverse pharmacological activities. Protopanaxadiol is the aglycon of several dammarane-type ginsenosides, which also has anticancer activity. For microbial production of protopanaxadiol, dammarenediol-II synthase and protopanaxadiol synthase genes of Panax ginseng, together with a NADPH-cytochrome P450 reductase gene of Arabidopsis thaliana, were introduced into Saccharomyces cerevisiae, resulting in production of 0.05Â mg/g DCW protopanaxadiol. Increasing squalene and 2,3-oxidosqualene supplies through overexpressing truncated 3-hydroxyl-3-methylglutaryl-CoA reductase, farnesyl diphosphate synthase, squalene synthase and 2,3-oxidosqualene synthase genes, together with increasing protopanaxadiol synthase activity through codon optimization, led to 262-fold increase of protopanaxadiol production. Finally, using two-phase extractive fermentation resulted in production of 8.40Â mg/g DCW protopanaxadiol (1189Â mg/L), together with 10.94Â mg/g DCW dammarenediol-II (1548Â mg/L). The yeast strains engineered in this work can serve as the basis for creating an alternative way for production of ginsenosides in place of extraction from plant sources.
Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering
Chemical Engineering
Bioengineering
Authors
Zhubo Dai, Yi Liu, Xianan Zhang, Mingyu Shi, Beibei Wang, Dong Wang, Luqi Huang, Xueli Zhang,