Simple glycolipids of microbes: Chemistry, biological activity and metabolic engineering
Author(s)
Abdel-Mawgoud, Ahmad Mohammad; Stephanopoulos, Gregory
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© 2017 The Authors Glycosylated lipids (GLs) are added-value lipid derivatives of great potential. Besides their interesting surface activities that qualify many of them to act as excellent ecological detergents, they have diverse biological activities with promising biomedical and cosmeceutical applications. Glycolipids, especially those of microbial origin, have interesting antimicrobial, anticancer, antiparasitic as well as immunomodulatory activities. Nonetheless, GLs are hardly accessing the market because of their high cost of production. We believe that experience of metabolic engineering (ME) of microbial lipids for biofuel production can now be harnessed towards a successful synthesis of microbial GLs for biomedical and other applications. This review presents chemical groups of bacterial and fungal GLs, their biological activities, their general biosynthetic pathways and an insight on ME strategies for their production.
Date issued
2018-03Department
Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Department of Chemical EngineeringJournal
Synthetic and Systems Biotechnology
Publisher
Elsevier BV
ISSN
2405-805X