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Synthetic biology approach to reprogramming the biosynthesis of natural products

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Wednesday, April 02, 2014
2:00 pm - 3:00 pm
Gavin Williams, NC State University Department of Chemistry
Duke Center for Systems Biology Seminars

Many natural products are biosynthesized in a modular fashion by the selection and condensation of small molecule building blocks, the natural diversity of which is modest. Chimeric biosynthetic systems can be constructed in an attempt to produce analogues for drug discovery. Yet, the scope and utility of such 'combinatorial biosynthetic' approaches is limited by the inherent substrate specificity and poor functional modularity of most biosynthetic components. Here, we show that biosynthetic machinery is more tolerant towards non-natural building blocks than has been previously recognized. Such promiscuity forms a platform for constructing new biosynthetic parts with substrate specificities orthogonal to those found in Nature. We describe a comprehensive program of enzyme engineering, directed evolution, and synthetic biology aimed at constructing artificial bacterial strains capable of producing complex natural products that are regioselectively modified with non-natural chemical functionality. Our synthetic biology approach expands the synthetic capabilities of natural product diversification strategies, and provides an improved understanding of the molecular basis for specificity in complex molecular assemblies.