Identification of clerodane diterpene modifying cytochrome P450 (CYP728D26) in <i>Salvia divinorum</i> - en route to psychotropic salvinorin A biosynthesis
- Authors
- Ngo, Iris; Kumar, Rahul; Li, Liang; Kim, Seon-Won; Kwon, Moonhyuk; Ro, Dae-Kyun
- Issue Date
- Sep-2024
- Publisher
- Blackwell Publishing Inc.
- Citation
- Physiologia Plantarum, v.176, no.5
- Indexed
- SCIE
SCOPUS
- Journal Title
- Physiologia Plantarum
- Volume
- 176
- Number
- 5
- URI
- https://scholarworks.gnu.ac.kr/handle/sw.gnu/74445
- DOI
- 10.1111/ppl.14569
- ISSN
- 0031-9317
1399-3054
- Abstract
- Salvia divinorum is a hallucinogenic plant native to the Oaxaca in Mexico. The active ingredient for psychotropic effects in this plant is salvinorin A, a potent and highly selective kappa-opioid receptor agonist. Salvinorin A is distinct from other well-known opioids, such as morphine and codeine, in that it is a non-nitrogenous diterpenoid with no affinity for mu-opioid receptor, the prime receptor of alkaloidal opioids. A terpene opioid that selectively targets a new opioid receptor (kappa-opioid receptor) can be instrumental in developing alternative analgesics. Elucidation of the salvinorin A biosynthetic pathway can help bio-manufacture diverse semi-synthetic derivatives of salvinorin A but, to date, only two enzymes in the Salvinorin A pathway have been identified. Here, we identify CYP728D26 that catalyzes a C18 oxygenation on crotonolide G, which bears a clerodane backbone. Biochemical identity of CYP728D26 was validated by in vivo reconstitution in yeast, (1) H- and (1)(3) C-NMR analyses of the purified product, and kinetic analysis of CYP728D26 with a K m value of 13.9 mu M. Beyond the single oxygenation on C18, collision-induced dissociation analysis suggested two additional oxygenations are catalyzed by CYP728D26 to form crotonoldie G acid, although this carboxylic acid form is a minor product. Its close homologue CYP728D25 exhibited a C1-hydroxylation on the clerodane backbone in a reconstituted yeast system. However, CYP728D25 showed no activity in in vitro assays. This result implies that catalytic activities observed from overexpression systems should be interpreted cautiously. This work identified a new CYP catalyst and advanced our knowledge of salvinorin A biosynthesis.
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