Probing Labdane-Related Diterpenoid Biosynthesis in
the Fungal Genus Aspergillus
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Version 1 2017-01-31, 18:51Version 1 2017-01-31, 18:51
Posted on 2018-01-31 - 09:15
While terpenoid production is generally
associated with plants,
a variety of fungi contain operons predicted to lead to such biosynthesis.
Notably, fungi contain a number of cyclases characteristic of labdane-related
diterpenoid metabolism, which have not been much explored. These also
are often found near cytochrome P450 (CYP) mono-oxygenases that presumably
further decorate the ensuing diterpene, suggesting that these fungi
might produce more elaborate diterpenoids. To probe the functional
diversity of such biosynthetic capacity, an investigation of the phylogenetically
diverse cyclases and associated CYPs from the fungal genus Aspergillus was undertaken, revealing their ability to produce
isopimaradiene-derived diterpenoids. Intriguingly, labdane-related
diterpenoid biosynthetic genes are largely found in plant-associated
fungi, hinting that these natural products may play a role in such
interactions. Accordingly, it is hypothesized here that isopimarane
production may assist the plant-saprophytic lifestyle of Aspergillus fungi.
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Xu, Meimei; Hillwig, Matthew L.; Tiernan, Mollie S.; Peters, Reuben J. (2017). Probing Labdane-Related Diterpenoid Biosynthesis in
the Fungal Genus Aspergillus. ACS Publications. Collection. https://doi.org/10.1021/acs.jnatprod.6b00764