Biosynthesis of natural and novel C-glycosylflavones utilising recombinant Oryza sativa C-glycosyltransferase (OsCGT) and Desmodium incanum root proteins
The rice C-glycosyltransferase (OsCGT) is one of only a small number of characterised plant C-glycosyltransferases (CGT) known. The enzyme C-glucosylates a 2-hydroxyflavanone substrate with UDP-glucose as the sugar donor to produce C-glucosyl-2-hydroxyflavanones. We tested substrate specificity of the enzyme, using synthetic 2-hydroxyflavanones, and showed it has the potential to generate known natural CGFs that have been isolated from rice and also other plants. In addition, we synthesised novel, unnatural 2-hydroxyflavanone substrates to test the B-ring chemical space of substrate accepted by the OsCGT and demonstrated the OsCGT capacity as a synthetic reagent to generate significant quantities of known and novel CGFs. Many B-ring analogues are tolerated within a confined steric limit. Finally the OsCGT was used to generate novel mono-C-glucosyl-2-hydroxyflavanones as putative biosynthetic intermediates to examine the potential of Desmodium incanum biosynthetic CGTs to produce novel di-C-glycosylflavones, compounds implicated in the allelopathic biological activity of Desmodium against parasitic weeds from the Striga genus.
| Item Type | Article |
|---|---|
| Open Access | Gold |
| Keywords | Oryza sativa, Poaceae, C-Glycosyltransferase, OsCGT, 2-Hydroxyflavanone, C-Glucosylflavone, Di-C-glycosylflavone, Biotechnological synthesis, Substrate specificity, Chemical space |
| Project | Delivering Sustainable Systems (SS) [ISPG], Adapting Push Pull Technology for Climate Change, Integrated Striga Management for Africa, Project: 5447 |
| Date Deposited | 05 Dec 2025 09:52 |
| Last Modified | 19 Dec 2025 14:36 |


