Complex scaffold remodeling in plant triterpene biosynthesis

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Abstract

Triterpenes with complex scaffold modifications are widespread in plants yet little is known regarding biosynthesis. Limonoids are an exemplary family that includes the bitter taste in citrus (e.g., limonin) and the active constituents in neem oil, a widely used bioinsecticide (e.g., azadirachtin). Despite limonoid commercial value, a complete biosynthetic route has not been described. Here, we report the discovery of 22 enzymes that catalyze 12 unique reactions including the 4-carbon scission and furan installation that are a signature of the limonoid family and a pair of sterol isomerases previously unknown in plants. This gene set is then used for the total biosynthesis of kihadalactone A and azadirone in a heterologous plant. These results enable access to valuable limonoids and provide a template for discovery and reconstitution of triterpene biosynthetic pathways in plants that require multiple skeletal rearrangements and oxidations.

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europepmc
last seen: 2026-05-19T01:45:01.086888+00:00
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License: CC-BY-NC-ND-4.0