Publication | Closed Access
Orthogonal Assays Clarify the Oxidative Biochemistry of Taxol P450 CYP725A4
37
Citations
36
References
2016
Year
EngineeringMetabolic RemodelingRedox BiologyOxidative StressBiosynthesisBiochemical GeneticsMetabolic EngineeringNatural Product BiosynthesisPathway EngineeringCancer MetabolismFuture Taxol MetabolicAldehyde DehydrogenaseBiochemistryBiocatalysisSpontaneous RearrangementPharmacologyBiomolecular EngineeringOrthogonal Assays ClarifyAnticancer Agent TaxolEnzyme CatalysisMedicineCarbonyl Metabolism
Natural product metabolic engineering potentially offers sustainable and affordable access to numerous valuable molecules. However, challenges in characterizing and assembling complex biosynthetic pathways have prevented more rapid progress in this field. The anticancer agent Taxol represents an excellent case study. Assembly of a biosynthetic pathway for Taxol has long been stalled at its first functionalization, putatively an oxygenation performed by the cytochrome P450 CYP725A4, due to confounding characterizations. Here, through combined in vivo (Escherichia coli), in vitro (lipid nanodisc), and metabolite stability assays, we verify the presence and likely cause of this enzyme's inherent promiscuity. Thereby, we remove the possibility that promiscuity simply existed as an artifact of previous metabolic engineering approaches. Further, spontaneous rearrangement and the stabilizing effect of a hydrophobic overlay suggest a potential role for nonenzymatic chemistry in Taxol's biosynthesis. Taken together, this work confirms taxadiene-5α-ol as a primary enzymatic product of CYP725A4 and provides direction for future Taxol metabolic and protein engineering efforts.
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