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Complete integration of carbene-transfer chemistry into biosynthesis.

Jing HuangAndrew QuestPablo Cruz-MoralesKai DengJose Henrique PereiraDevon Van CuraRamu KakumanuEdward E K BaidooQingyun DanYan ChenChristopher J PetzoldTrent R NorthenPaul D AdamsDouglas S ClarkEmily P BalskusJohn F HartwigAindrila MukhopadhyayJay D Keasling
Published in: Nature (2023)
Biosynthesis is an environmentally benign and renewable approach that can be used to produce a broad range of natural and, in some cases, new-to-nature products. However, biology lacks many of the reactions that are available to synthetic chemists, resulting in a narrower scope of accessible products when using biosynthesis rather than synthetic chemistry. A prime example of such chemistry is carbene-transfer reactions 1 . Although it was recently shown that carbene-transfer reactions can be performed in a cell and used for biosynthesis 2,3 , carbene donors and unnatural cofactors needed to be added exogenously and transported into cells to effect the desired reactions, precluding cost-effective scale-up of the biosynthesis process with these reactions. Here we report the access to a diazo ester carbene precursor by cellular metabolism and a microbial platform for introducing unnatural carbene-transfer reactions into biosynthesis. The α-diazoester azaserine was produced by expressing a biosynthetic gene cluster in Streptomyces albus. The intracellularly produced azaserine was used as a carbene donor to cyclopropanate another intracellularly produced molecule-styrene. The reaction was catalysed by engineered P450 mutants containing a native cofactor with excellent diastereoselectivity and a moderate yield. Our study establishes a scalable, microbial platform for conducting intracellular abiological carbene-transfer reactions to functionalize a range of natural and new-to-nature products and expands the scope of organic products that can be produced by cellular metabolism.
Keyphrases
  • cell wall
  • microbial community
  • gene expression
  • high throughput
  • bone marrow
  • single cell
  • oxidative stress
  • dna methylation
  • copy number
  • drug discovery
  • transcription factor
  • high intensity