- Martin, Laetitia BB;
- Kikuchi, Shingo;
- Rejzek, Martin;
- Owen, Charlotte;
- Reed, James;
- Orme, Anastasia;
- Misra, Rajesh C;
- El-Demerdash, Amr;
- Hill, Lionel;
- Hodgson, Hannah;
- Liu, Yuzhong;
- Keasling, Jay D;
- Field, Robert A;
- Truman, Andrew W;
- Osbourn, Anne
QS-21 is a potent vaccine adjuvant currently sourced by extraction from the Chilean soapbark tree. It is a key component of human vaccines for shingles, malaria, coronavirus disease 2019 and others under development. The structure of QS-21 consists of a glycosylated triterpene scaffold coupled to a complex glycosylated 18-carbon acyl chain that is critical for immunostimulant activity. We previously identified the early pathway steps needed to make the triterpene glycoside scaffold; however, the biosynthetic route to the acyl chain, which is needed for stimulation of T cell proliferation, was unknown. Here, we report the biogenic origin of the acyl chain, characterize the series of enzymes required for its synthesis and addition and reconstitute the entire 20-step pathway in tobacco, thereby demonstrating the production of QS-21 in a heterologous expression system. This advance opens up unprecedented opportunities for bioengineering of vaccine adjuvants, investigating structure-activity relationships and understanding the mechanisms by which these compounds promote the human immune response.