Abstract

A cell suspension culture of Tabernaemontana elegans lost its ability to produce alkaloids after a prolonged period of subculture. To determine whether it was still capable of performing the later steps of the alkaloid biosynthetic pathway, the culture was fed with tryptamine and loganin. The precursors and alkaloids were determined in the biomass and in the medium during a growth cycle. In this culture, an increase in the amount of serotonin was found in the biomass after feeding of tryptamine and loganin. Secologanin was detected in small amounts but strictosidine was not. Therefore, a limitation in alkaloid formation in this T. elegans cell line occured in the formation of secologanin from loganin. After feeding of secologanin alone, strictosidine, 10-hydroxy strictosidine, strictosidinic acid and two other indole alkaloids, as yet unidentified, were formed. However, the alkaloids originally produced by this cell line were not found. As the biosynthesis is impaired at several steps, it seems that the loss of productivity is more likely to be to a change on the level of the regulation of the pathway, than due to the loss of the capacity to express an individual biosynthetic gene of the pathway.

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