Microbial production of the plant-derived fungicide physcion

Metab Eng. 2022 Nov:74:130-138. doi: 10.1016/j.ymben.2022.10.007. Epub 2022 Nov 1.

Abstract

Physcion is a characteristic component of the traditional herb rhubarb with diverse pharmacological activities that has been commercially approved as an herbal fungicide. Nevertheless, its extremely low contents, costly purification procedure and geographically restricted planting severely hinder its application. Here, a cell factory was constructed in the filamentous fungus Aspergillus terreus for physcion production via microbial fermentation by integrating a pathway-modified emodin accumulation module and a position-selective emodin methylation module. Specifically, 1.71 g/L emodin accumulated when the transcriptional activator GedR and the emodin-1-OH-O-methyltransferase GedA in the geodin biosynthetic pathway were overexpressed and knocked out, respectively. Subsequently, potential emodin-3-OH-O-methyltransferase candidates were enzymatically screened in vitro and introduced into the emodin-accumulating mutant in vivo to generate a physcion-producing strain showing the highest titre of 6.3 g/L in fed-batch fermentation. Thus, our study provides an alternative strategy for the highly efficient, economical production of physcion and a representative example for microbial synthetic biology.

Keywords: Anthraquinone; Aspergillus terreus; Filamentous fungus; Physcion; Plant-derived fungicide; Synthetic biology.

Publication types

  • Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't

MeSH terms

  • Anthraquinones
  • Emodin*
  • Fungicides, Industrial*
  • Methyltransferases
  • Plants

Substances

  • physcione
  • Emodin
  • Fungicides, Industrial
  • Methyltransferases
  • Anthraquinones