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Review Article|08 Oct 2024|OPEN
Recent trends in the elucidation of complex triterpene biosynthetic pathways in horticultural trees 
Sandeep Dinday,1 ,
1Metabolic engineering and Synthetic Biology Laboratory, Department of Natural Products, National Institute of Pharmaceutical Education and Research, S.A.S Nagar 160062, Punjab, India
*Corresponding author. E-mail: sandeepdinday@niper.ac.in

Horticulture Research 12,
Article number: uhae254 (2025)
doi: https://doi.org/10.1093/hr/uhae254
Views: 2126

Received: 29 May 2024
Accepted: 02 Sep 2024
Published online: 08 Oct 2024

Abstract

Triterpene (C30 isoprene compounds) represents the most structurally diverse class of natural products and has been extensively exploited in the food, medicine, and industrial sectors. Decades of research on medicinal triterpene biosynthetic pathways have revealed their roles in stress tolerance and shaping microbiota. However, the biological function and mechanism of triterpenes are not fully identified. Even this scientific window narrows down for horticultural trees. The lack of knowledge and a scalable production system limits the discovery of triterpene pathways. Recent synthetic biology research revealed several important biosynthetic pathways that define their roles and address many societal sustainability challenges. Here, I review the chemical diversity and biosynthetic enzymes involved in triterpene biosynthesis of horticultural trees. This review also outlines the integrated Design-Build-Test-Learn (DBTL) pipelines for the discovery, characterization, and optimization of triterpene biosynthetic pathways. Further, these DBTL components share many fundamental and technical difficulties, highlighting opportunities for interdisciplinary collaboration between researchers worldwide. This advancement opens up unprecedented opportunities for the bioengineering of triterpene compounds toward development and scaleup processes.