Abstract

Morphine, sanguinarine and chelerythrine are benzylisoquinoline alkaloids (BIAs), and these compounds possess strong biological activities. (S)-scoulerine is a commonly shared precursor of these compounds, and berberine bridge enzyme (BBE) is a key rate-limiting enzyme in the synthesis of (S)-scoulerine. We isolated the BBE gene from Macleaya cordata (McBBE) and used CEN.PK2-1C as a chassis strain. We compared the catalytic efficiency of five codon-optimized McBBE genes in Saccharomyces cerevisiae and finally obtained a yeast strain (YH03) that exhibited a 58-fold increase in yield (1.12mg/L). Then, we truncated the N-terminus of McBBE by 8 and 22 amino acids and found that with the increase in the number of N-terminal truncated amino acids, the production of (S)-scoulerine gradually decreased. Additionally, we used CRISPR-Cas9 to integrate the McBBE gene at the delta site of the S. cerevisiae genome to achieve stable genetic inheritance and found that the yield of (S)-scoulerine was not significantly increased in the integrated strain. In conclusion, our work achieved high-efficiency expression of McBBE in S. cerevisiae, explored the influence of N-terminal truncation on the yield of (S)-scoulerine, and obtained a genetically stable S. cerevisiae strain with high McBBE expression. This study provides a reference for further complex metabolic engineering optimization and lays a foundation for the efficient biosynthesis of BIAs.

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