The medical drug pilocarpine is one of the treatments for glaucoma or dry mouth. Pilocarpine is an alkaloid made by Pilocarpus shrubs naturally grown in the Amazon rainforest. As it is not cost-effective to chemically synthesize pilocarpine, commercial demands are met by extracting it from its natural source, the leaves of Pilocarpus plants. Since cultivated Pilocarpus plants have lower pilocarpine content than wild plants, leaves of wild-grown Pilocarpus are preferred for production. Excessive leaf harvesting of wild populations has led to the official listing of several Pilocarpus species as threatened. Synthetic biology offers a sustainable approach for the production of pilocarpine through its synthesis in heterologous hosts, such as microbes. However, to realize this vision, a detailed knowledge about the biosynthetic pathway of pilocarpine in Pilocarpus plants is needed. The aim of PiloSyn is to understand how Pilocarpus plants make pilocarpine, thus laying the foundation for a more sustainable pilocarpine production.