Interactomics-driven discovery of alkaloid biosynthetic pathways in kratom
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Plant monoterpene indole alkaloids (MIAs) exhibit important pharmacological activities, yet understanding of their biosyntheses remains incomplete. Since protein-protein interactions (PPIs) represent a conserved regulatory mechanism in MIA-producing plants, we developed a large-scale, yeast-based screening pipeline to profile PPIs of a key enzyme, strictosidine β-D-glucosidase (SGD) from Mitragyna speciosa (kratom). This screen identified six novel medium-chain dehydrogenases/reductases (MDRs) as high-confidence interaction partners of SGD. Biochemical characterization revealed that all six MsMDRs produce an MIA we named charlamine by acting directly on the reactive strictosidine aglycone intermediate, preventing its spontaneous rearrangement and establishing a functional rationale for SGD–MDR interaction. One MsMDR additionally catalyzed the reduction of vallesiachotamine, derived from the spontaneous rearrangement of strictosidine aglycone, to another previously unreported MIA, vallesiachotaminol. Parallel transcriptomics and genomics analyses uncovered a biosynthetic gene cluster containing a dihydrocorynantheine aldehyde esterase, functioning downstream of MsMDRs. Collectively, these findings demonstrate the utility of interactomics-driven plant pathway discovery.