Engineering modular enzyme assembly: synthetic interface strategies for natural products biosynthesis applications
Abstract
Covering: 2020 to 2025
Natural products remain indispensable sources of therapeutic and bioactive compounds, yet traditional discovery strategies are constrained by compound rediscovery. Modular biosynthetic enzymes, such as type I polyketide synthases (PKSs) and type A non-ribosomal peptide synthetases (NRPSs), offer promising platforms for combinatorial biosynthesis owing to their programmable architectures. However, practical implementation is frequently limited by inter-modular incompatibility and domain-specific interactions. This review highlights recent advances in modular enzyme assembly enabled by synthetic interfaces-including cognate docking domains, synthetic coiled-coils, SpyTag/SpyCatcher, and split inteins-which function as orthogonal, standardized connectors to facilitate post-translational complex formation. These interfaces support rational investigations into substrate specificity, module compatibility, and pathway derivatization as well as general enzyme clustering applications beyond PKS and NRPS systems. Synthetic interfaces can be integrated with computational tools to support a more systematic and scalable framework for modular enzyme engineering by providing predictive insights into domain compatibility and interface design. These approaches within iterative design-build-test-learn workflows can accelerate the programmable assembly of biosynthetic systems and expand the accessible chemical space for natural products.