Abstract

Taxadiene is the first committed precursor to paclitaxel, marketed as Taxol, arguably the most important anticancer agent against ovarian and breast cancer. In Taxus, taxadiene is directly synthesized from geranylgeranyl diphosphate (GGPP) that is the common precursor for diterpenoids and is found in most plants and microbes. In this study, Artemisia annua L., a Chinese medicinal herb that grows fast and is rich in terpenoids, was used as a genetic engineering host to produce taxadiene. The TXS (taxadiene synthase) gene, cloned from Taxus and inserted into pCAMBIA1304, was transformed into Artemisia annua L. using the Agrobacterium tumefaciens-mediated method. Thirty independent transgenic plants were obtained, and GC-MS analysis was used to confirm that taxadiene was produced and accumulated up to 129.7 μg/g dry mass. However, the high expression of TXS did not affect plant growth or photosynthesis in transgenic Artemisia annua L. It is notable that artemisinin is produced and stored in leaves and most taxadiene accumulated in the stem of transgenic Artemisia annua L., suggesting a new way to produce two important compounds in one transgenic plant: leaves for artemisinin and stem for taxadiene. Overall, this study demonstrates that genetic engineering of the taxane biosynthetic pathway in Artemisia annua L. for the production of taxadiene is feasible.

Highlights

  • Taxanes are a class of polycyclic diterpenes produced by many species of yew

  • The probe hybridized to the supercoiled pCAMBIA1304::p35sTXS-nos but did not hybridize to wild A. annua

  • Young plant leaves from the transgenic T1 generation were harvested and checked for taxadiene synthase gene (TXS) gene insertion by Southern blot analysis

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Summary

Introduction

Taxanes are a class of polycyclic diterpenes produced by many species of yew. Among these taxanes, paclitaxel, known as Taxol, is the most important chemotherapy drug in the treatment of ovarian and breast cancers and diseased vasculature [1, 2]. Semisynthesis methods start from more abundant and readily available precursors, such as 10-deacetylbaccatin III and baccatin III from Taxus, but the limited availability of natural yew trees, slow growth rate of cultivated ones, and the low yield of taxanes result in a high price for Taxol [4]. It is considered that cell cultures and entophytic fungi fermentation are good sources of Taxol or its intermediates [5,6,7]; the processes of cell culture are not easy and yield is low

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