Sarpagan-Ajmalan-Type Indoles: Biosynthesis, Structural Biology, and Chemo-Enzymatic Significance

Alkaloids Chem Biol. 2016:76:1-61. doi: 10.1016/bs.alkal.2015.10.001. Epub 2015 Nov 28.

Abstract

The biosynthetic pathway of the monoterpenoid indole alkaloid ajmaline in the genus Rauvolfia, in particular Rauvolfia serpentina Benth. ex Kurz, is one of the few pathways that have been comprehensively uncovered. Every step in the progress of plant alkaloid biosynthesis research is due to the endeavors of several generations of scientists and the advancement of technologies. The tissue and cell suspension cultures developed in the 1970s by M.H. Zenk enabled the extraction of alkaloids and crude enzymes for use as experimental materials, thus establishing the foundation for further research on enzymatic reaction networks. In vivo NMR technology was first used in biosynthetic investigations in the 1990s following the invention of high-field cryo-NMR, which allowed the rapid and reliable detection of bioconversion processes within living plant cells. Shortly before, in 1988, a milestone was reached with the heterologous expression of the strictosidine synthase cDNA, which paved the way for the application of "reverse genetics" and "macromolecular crystallography." Both methods allowed the structural analysis of several Rauvolfia enzymes involved in ajmaline biosynthesis and expanded our knowledge of the enzyme mechanisms, substrate specificities, and structure-activity relationships. It also opened the door for rational enzyme engineering and metabolic steering. Today, the research focus of ajmaline biosynthesis is shifting from "delineation" to "utilization." The Pictet-Spenglerase strictosidine synthase, strictosidine glucosidase, together with raucaffricine glucosidase, as pioneers in this area, have become useful tools to generate "privileged structures" and "diversity oriented" syntheses, which may help to construct novel scaffolds and to set up libraries of sarpagan-ajmalan-type alkaloids in chemo-enzymatic approaches.

Keywords: Ajmaline pathway; Biosynthesis; Chemo-enzymatic significance; Enzymes; In vivo NMR; Monoterpenoid indole alkaloids; Protein engineering; Rauvolfia; Sarpagan-ajmalan family; Side routes; Structural biology.

Publication types

  • Review

MeSH terms

  • Ajmaline / biosynthesis*
  • Ajmaline / chemistry
  • Glucosidases / metabolism
  • Indole Alkaloids / chemistry
  • Indole Alkaloids / metabolism*
  • Magnetic Resonance Spectroscopy
  • Secologanin Tryptamine Alkaloids / chemistry
  • Secologanin Tryptamine Alkaloids / metabolism

Substances

  • Indole Alkaloids
  • Secologanin Tryptamine Alkaloids
  • Ajmaline
  • Glucosidases
  • sarpagine