Xylindein is a blue-green pigment produced by the fungi and Its stunning color and optoelectronic properties make xylindein valuable for textiles and as a natural semiconductor material. However, producing xylindein from culture broths remains challenging because of the slow growth of the species and the poor solubility of xylindein in organic solvents. An alternative production route for obtaining pure xylindein is heterologous expression of the xylindein biosynthetic genes. Here, we resequenced the genome of and , and subsequent genome mining and phylogenetic dereplication identified a unique candidate biosynthetic gene cluster with a nonreducing polyketide synthase (nrPKS). RNA sequencing during xylindein production revealed that the core gene is co-regulated with eight other genes at the locus. Among those, and encode a putative fatty acid synthase, which likely provides the starter unit to XLNpks. Attempts to heterologously express in alone or in combination with and did not yield any intermediate, but expression of the closely related viriditoxin nrPKS (VdtA) produced the expected intermediate. Based on our results, we propose a biosynthetic route to xylindein and suggest that the obtained transformants open ways to further study xylindein biosynthesis.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/acs.jnatprod.4c00350 | DOI Listing |
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