Abstract

Streptomyces bacteria are a major microbial source of natural products, which are encoded within so-called biosynthetic gene clusters (BGCs). This highlight discusses the emergence of native Streptomyces cell-free systems as a new tool to accelerate the study of the fundamental chemistry and biology of natural product biosynthesis from these bacteria. Cell-free systems provide a prototyping platform to study plug-and-play reactions in microscale reactions. So far, Streptomyces cell-free systems have been used to rapidly characterise gene expression regulation, access secondary metabolite biosynthetic enzymes, and catalyse cell-free transcription, translation, and biosynthesis of example natural products. With further progress, we anticipate the development of more complex systems to complement existing experimental tools for the discovery and engineering of natural product biosynthesis from Streptomyces and related high G + C (%) bacteria.

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