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Plant carbonic anhydrase-like enzymes in neuroactive alkaloid biosynthesis.

Ryan S NettYaereen DhoChun TsaiDaria PassowJaime Martinez GrundmanYun-Yee LowElizabeth S Sattely
Published in: Nature (2023)
Plants synthesize numerous alkaloids that mimic animal neurotransmitters 1 . The diversity of alkaloid structures is achieved through the generation and tailoring of unique carbon scaffolds 2,3 , yet many neuroactive alkaloids belong to a scaffold class for which no biosynthetic route or enzyme catalyst is known. By studying highly coordinated, tissue-specific gene expression in plants that produce neuroactive Lycopodium alkaloids 4 , we identified an unexpected enzyme class for alkaloid biosynthesis: neofunctionalized α-carbonic anhydrases (CAHs). We show that three CAH-like (CAL) proteins are required in the biosynthetic route to a key precursor of the Lycopodium alkaloids by catalysing a stereospecific Mannich-like condensation and subsequent bicyclic scaffold generation. Also, we describe a series of scaffold tailoring steps that generate the optimized acetylcholinesterase inhibition activity of huperzine A 5 . Our findings suggest a broader involvement of CAH-like enzymes in specialized metabolism and demonstrate how successive scaffold tailoring can drive potency against a neurological protein target.
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