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Key enzyme identified in final step of iridoid biosynthesis in plants

Final step in the biosynthesis of iridoids elucidated
The plant species that produce iridoids and possess a gene copy of the cyclase include (top row from left to right) icepac Carapichea ipecacuanha, fever tree (Cinchona pubescens), golden trumpet (Allamanda cathartica), princess tree (Paulownia tomentosa), (bottom row, from left to right) Carolina jessamine (Gelsemium sempervirens), Madagascar periwinkle (Catharanthus roseus), strychnine tree (Strychnos nux-vomica), and devil pepper (Rauvolfia tetraphylla). Credit: Eva Rothe, greenhouse of the Max Planck Institute for Chemical Ecology (with the exception of the photo of the ipecac plant, which was taken by Maite Colinas).

Iridoids are a widespread and evolutionarily ancient class of plant secondary metabolites belonging to the terpenes. They occur in thousands of plant species and play an important role in defense and other interactions between plants and their environment.

Iridoids are also found in foods such as olives and blueberries, and are believed to have anti-inflammatory properties. They are also essential precursors for many medically important compounds, including the cancer drug vinblastine and the ipecacuanha alkaloids found in the , sage-leaved alangium and ipecac root.

Despite their importance, the biosynthetic pathway had not yet been fully elucidated. The crucial step of cyclization to nepetalactol—the basic structure of all iridoids—was still missing.

Sarah O'Connor, head of the Natural Product Biosynthesis Department at the Max Planck Institute for Chemical Ecology in Jena, has been researching this biosynthetic pathway for over 15 years.

"Enzymes that can form the iridoid skeleton have been known for a long time. These iridoid synthases produce small amounts of nepetalactol and large amounts of by-products simultaneously. We therefore long suspected that the crucial cyclization reaction could occur spontaneously, without the help of another enzyme," says Sarah O'Connor, explaining the starting point of the research.

"However, later experiments, including those on catnip, provided evidence that cyclization is catalyzed by an enzyme. Nevertheless, we had no idea what such an enzyme might look like."

As it was not possible to narrow the search down to specific enzyme classes, hundreds of possible candidates would normally have had to be tested for activity. However, thanks to a collaboration with Robin Buell from the University of Georgia (U.S.), a new dataset became available that proved crucial in narrowing down the number of candidates. The work has been published in Nature Plants.

Generated by Robin Buell's laboratory using state-of-the-art methods, this dataset included in individual ipecac cells, rather than in different tissues as in a previously compiled dataset. Comparing the two datasets revealed that only a very small number of unknown genes correlated with the expression of the known iridoid biosynthesis genes in both datasets.

This small number enabled rapid testing for activity, which was carried out by master's student Chloée Tymen. For one of these unknown genes, the researchers were able to demonstrate that the cyclization reaction is catalyzed when it is expressed in plants or bacteria.

This confirmed that this gene encodes the long-sought cyclase. Comparing the amino acid sequence of the cyclase with sequences from thousands of plant species in public databases revealed that the enzyme occurs precisely in plant species that form iridoids.

"We were able to show that the reaction we investigated is indeed catalyzed by the enzyme and that the expected substance, nepetalactol, is formed. However, to our surprise, the enzyme we found belongs to a completely unexpected class of enzymes. This class of enzymes is known for catalyzing a completely different reaction," explains Maite Colinas, group leader in Sarah O'Connor's department and first author of the study.

Final step in the biosynthesis of iridoids elucidated
Maite Colinas shows Sarah O'Connor the results of the enzyme activity tests. These were obtained using the mass spectrometry equipment shown in the picture. Credit: Karin Groten, Max Planck Institute for Chemical Ecology

The mechanistic process of cyclization is still unclear. There are different ways in which a cyclization can occur chemically, and it is not yet known through which of the possible chemical reaction mechanisms the discovered cyclization proceeds.

It is also unclear how the cyclization function evolutionarily evolved from a completely different enzyme reaction. These questions are the subject of further investigation.

The discovery of the cyclase important for iridoid formation shows once again that enzymes can catalyze completely unexpected reactions that cannot be predicted by bioinformatic methods.

This enzyme paves the way for future biotechnological production of nepetalactol and its derivatives, such as the anti-cancer drugs vinblastine and vincristine, in yeast, fungi, or other .

More information: Discovery of iridoid cyclase completes the iridoid pathway in asterids, Nature Plants (2025). .

Journal information: Nature Plants

Provided by Max Planck Society

Citation: Key enzyme identified in final step of iridoid biosynthesis in plants (2025, October 3) retrieved 3 October 2025 from /news/2025-10-key-enzyme-iridoid-biosynthesis.html
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