An artificial metabolic route to an unnatural trichothecene was designed by taking advantage of the broad substrate specificities of the T-2 toxin biosynthetic enzymes of Fusarium sporotrichioides. By feeding 7-hydroxyisotrichodermin, a shunt pathway metabolite of F. graminearum, to a trichodiene synthase-deficient mutant of F. sporotrichioides, 7-hydroxy T-2 toxin (1) was obtained as the final metabolite. Such an approach may have future applications in the metabolic engineering of a variety of fungal secondary metabolites. The toxicity of 7-hydroxy T-2 toxin was 10 times lower than that of T-2 toxin in HL-60 cells.