Scimex: US and Canadian scientists have engineered yeast that can complete the
early steps of synthesising opioids - the class of compounds that
includes heroin and morphine - complementing previous studies that
engineered yeast that completes the later steps of the pathway. In an
accompanying Nature comment article, a US expert argues that
regulation of yeast-based opiate synthesis must happen soon and be
flexible to protect the public and the research community.
An engineered yeast that can complete the early steps of opioid
synthesis, producing (S)-reticuline from glucose, is reported in a paper
published online this week in Nature Chemical Biology.
Previous studies have shown that engineered yeasts can complete the
final steps of opioid synthesis. Future research to refine and bridge
these pathways may eventually allow for large-scale, low cost production
of opioids.
Many, widely-used drugs are isolated or manufactured from plant extracts
because their structural complexity precludes their cost-effective
synthesis in the laboratory. Systems using engineered microbes, such as
yeasts, to produce these compounds are recently becoming a reality
thanks to advances in DNA sequencing and synthetic
biology. Benzylisoquinoline alkaloids (BIAs) are a large family of
plant-derived chemicals that include the compounds morphine and codeine.
They have been difficult to produce using microbes because a key enzyme
early in the pathway that can work in yeast to convert L-tyrosine to
L-DOPA (a precursor to dopamine), has not been found.
To address this, John Dueber and colleagues developed a unique
colour-coded biosensor which allowed them to identify the missing
enzyme, which they then mutated to make it more productive. They
genetically engineered the yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae to
produce this enzyme, allowing the first demonstration of the conversion
of glucose to dopamine by yeast. The authors then modified the yeast
further, adding DNA from other species, so that it could perform
subsequent reactions in the pathway, eventually producing the
intermediary, (S)-reticuline. One more step is now required to bridge
the two pathways.
Pamela Peralta-Yahya states in an accompanying News & Views that
"Given that downstream BIA pathway enzymes have already been shown to
express in yeast, this work opens the door to the production of complex
BIAs directly from glucose."
Comment: Regulate 'home-brew' opiates
The
synthesis of opiates by genetically engineered yeast requires fast and
flexible regulation to protect the public and the research community,
say Kenneth Oye and colleagues in a Comment published by Nature this week.
The paper published in Nature Chemical Biology this week, and
one published by PloS ONE in April, describe steps of an engineered
yeast pathway that could make morphine from sugar. The research could
lead to cheaper, less addictive and more effective analgesics, say Oye
and co–authors. They warn, however, that this development could
dramatically increase illicit access to opiates, by generating a drug
source that easy to grow, conceal and distribute.
In principle, anyone "would be able to grow the yeast using a home-brew
kit for beer-making", they say, adding that users would probably need to
drink only 1–2 millilitres of 'opiate homebrew' to obtain a standard
prescribed dose of morphine.
The authors urge the synthetic biology community, in tandem with
regulators, to act fast. Their recommendations include: establishing
policies to keep engineered yeast strains within licensed facilities and
in the hands of authorized researchers and technicians; reducing the
attractiveness of engineered yeast strains in the illicit marketplace
(by engineering strains with unusual nutrient needs, for instance); and
implementing a flexible and responsive regulatory approach.
The researchers working on opiate production in yeast told the Nature Comment
authors about their feats several months ago, long before moving on to
develop and commercialize their tools. "With all the signs that
synthetic biology is coming of age, this type of responsible conduct is
imperative," Oye and co-authors conclude.