A Potential Anticancer Drug From Poppies Has Been Produced in Genetically Engineered Yeast
Researchers
from Stanford University and collaborating institutions have successfully
synthesized noscapine, a potential anticancer drug, in yeast cells. Noscapine,
a nonnarcotic cough suppressant that is also being investigated as a potential
anticancer drug, currently has only one source—the opium poppy. Because
environmental factors such as pests, disease, and climate can threaten the
poppy crop, which is only grown in a limited geographic area, other ways of
producing noscapine are needed to ensure a stable supply of the drug.
The research
team developed a strain of the yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae that can
produce noscapine from simple carbon and nitrogen sources through a biochemical
pathway that involves 31 enzymes taken from a variety of sources including
plants, mammals, and bacteria. They then used multiple techniques to optimize
noscapine production, leading to an 18,000-fold improvement in the amount
produced. They also used their engineered yeast strain to produce novel
compounds related to noscapine, some of which might also be able to be
developed into drugs.
This work
demonstrates the potential for microorganisms such as yeast to serve as
platforms for complex syntheses of valuable natural products from simple
chemical building blocks. Microbial synthesis can ensure a reliable supply of a
product and can provide greater batch-to-batch consistency in product
composition than can be achieved with plants. Also, the desired compounds can
be produced far more quickly; it takes only days to cultivate the yeast used to
produce noscapine, but it takes an entire growing season to raise a crop of
opium poppies. The success of this project, in combination with previous drug on
drug synthesis in genetically engineered yeasts, highlights the transformative
effect that synthetic biology may have on the development and production of
drugs and other complex plant-derived chemicals.
Reference
- Li Y, Li S, Thodey K, et al. Complete biosynthesis of noscapine and halogenated alkaloids in yeast. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences. April 2, 2018. [Epub ahead of print].
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