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1.
2.
The identification of a novel pathway for isopentenyl diphosphate synthesis by Rohmer, Arigoni and colleagues in the early 1990's has led to a reappraisal of terpenoid biosynthesis in many organisms. It is now apparent that in plants there are two biosynthetic routes to isopentenyl diphosphate-the classical mevalonate pathway in the cytosol and the deoxyxylulose phosphate pathway in plastids. Sesquiterpenoids and sterols are predominantly synthesized in the cytosol by the mevalonate pathway whereas monoterpenoids, diterpenoids, the phytol side-chain of chlorophyll, carotenoids, and the nonaprenyl side-chain of plastoquinone-9 are synthesized within plastids by the deoxyxylulose phosphate pathway. Our assumptions that the early stages of gibberellin biosynthesis are plastid-localized has led to several attempts to demonstrate that the deoxyxylulose phosphate pathway is the biosynthetic route to gibberellins. Although definitive evidence is still not available there is a growing body of evidence, mostly from transgenic plants and from the use of the inhibitor, fosmidomycin, that gibberellins are synthesized from deoxyxylulose phosphate-derived isopentenyl diphosphate. However, there is evidence that a small amount of cross-talk between the two pathways may occur, implying that the pathways are not totally autonomous. Implications for the regulation of the early stages of gibberellin biosynthesis are discussed.  相似文献   

3.
Gibberellins are ent-kaurene-derived diterpenoid phytohormones produced by plants, fungi, and bacteria. The distinct gibberellin biosynthetic pathways in plants and fungi are known, but not that in bacteria. Plants typically use two diterpene synthases to form ent-kaurene, while fungi use only a single bifunctional diterpene synthase. We demonstrate here that Bradyrhizobium japonicum encodes separate ent-copalyl diphosphate and ent-kaurene synthases. These are found in an operon whose enzymatic composition indicates that gibberellin biosynthesis in bacteria represents a third independently assembled pathway relative to plants and fungi. Nevertheless, sequence comparisons also suggest potential homology between diterpene synthases from bacteria, plants, and fungi.  相似文献   

4.
Gibberellins are phytohormones that regulate growth and development of plants. Gibberellin homeostasis is maintained by feedback regulation of gibberellin metabolism genes. To understand this regulation, we manipulated the gibberellin pathway in tobacco and studied its effects on the morphological phenotype, gibberellin levels and the expression of endogenous gibberellin metabolism genes. The overexpression of a gibberellin 3-oxidase (biosynthesis gene) in tobacco (3ox-OE) induced slight variations in phenotype and active GA(1) levels, but we also found an increase in GA(8) levels (GA(1) inactivation product) and a conspicuous induction of gibberellin 2-oxidases (catabolism genes; NtGA2ox3 and -5), suggesting an important role for these particular genes in the control of gibberellin homeostasis. The effect of simultaneous overexpression of two biosynthesis genes, a gibberellin 3-oxidase and a gibberellin 20-oxidase (20ox/3ox-OE), on phenotype and gibberellin content suggests that gibberellin 3-oxidases are non-limiting enzymes in tobacco, even in a 20ox-OE background. Moreover, the expression analysis of gibberellin metabolism genes in transgenic plants (3ox-OE, 20ox-OE and hybrid 3ox/20ox-OE), and in response to application of different GA(1) concentrations, showed genes with different gibberellin sensitivity. Gibberellin biosynthesis genes (NtGA20ox1 and NtGA3ox1) are negatively feedback regulated mainly by high gibberellin levels. In contrast, gibberellin catabolism genes which are subject to positive feedback regulation are sensitive to high (NtGA2ox1) or to low (NtGA2ox3 and -5) gibberellin concentrations. These two last GA2ox genes seem to play a predominant role in gibberellin homeostasis under mild gibberellin variations, but not under large gibberellin changes, where the biosynthesis genes GA20ox and GA3ox may be more important.  相似文献   

5.
Summary The plant growth retardant 2-isopropyl-4-dimethylamino-5-methylphenyl-1-piperidinecarboxylate methyl chloride (Amo-1618) and three analogs (Carvadan, XII, XIII) were tested for ability to inhibit gibberellin production in Fusarium moniliforme and to suppress stem elongation in three species of higher plants.Amo-1618 and compound XII were highly effective in suppressing GA production in Fusarium whereas Carvadan and XIII were inactive. These inactive analogs were not degraded to any appreciable extent by Fusarium cultures.All four compounds suppressed stem growth although the relative effectiveness varied with the species tested. Carvadan was most active in dwarfing Phaseolus vulgaris and Pharbitis nil; compound XII was most active in Helianthus annuus.The lack of correlation between the ability to inhibit gibberellin production in Fusarium and to cause dwarfed growth in higher plants is interpreted to indicate that enzymes involved in gibberellin biosynthesis in different organisms exhibit certain variations which make them more or less sensitive to inhibitors such as the four growth retardants tested.  相似文献   

6.
Immature pumpkin (Cucurbita maxima) seeds contain gibberellin (GA) oxidases with unique catalytic properties resulting in GAs of unknown function for plant growth and development. Overexpression of pumpkin GA 7-oxidase (CmGA7ox) in Arabidopsis (Arabidopsis thaliana) resulted in seedlings with elongated roots, taller plants that flower earlier with only a little increase in bioactive GA4 levels compared to control plants. In the same way, overexpression of the pumpkin GA 3-oxidase1 (CmGA3ox1) resulted in a GA overdose phenotype with increased levels of endogenous GA4. This indicates that, in Arabidopsis, 7-oxidation and 3-oxidation are rate-limiting steps in GA plant hormone biosynthesis that control plant development. With an opposite effect, overexpression of pumpkin seed-specific GA 20-oxidase1 (CmGA20ox1) in Arabidopsis resulted in dwarfed plants that flower late with reduced levels of GA4 and increased levels of physiological inactive GA17 and GA25 and unexpected GA34 levels. Severe dwarfed plants were obtained by overexpression of the pumpkin GA 2-oxidase1 (CmGA2ox1) in Arabidopsis. This dramatic change in phenotype was accompanied by a considerable decrease in the levels of bioactive GA4 and an increase in the corresponding inactivation product GA34 in comparison to control plants. In this study, we demonstrate the potential of four pumpkin GA oxidase-encoding genes to modulate the GA plant hormone pool and alter plant stature and development.  相似文献   

7.
Plants of Pharbitis nil were treated with the growth retardant (2-chloroethyl) trimethylammonium chloride (CCC) shortly before and after anthesis. Fresh and dry weight of immature seeds were not affected by the CCC treatment.

The level of gibberellin-like activity in Pharbitis seeds as compared to control seeds was strongly reduced by CCC application. The progenies of the treated plants also had a much reduced GA content in the seedling stage. These results are interpreted to indicate that CCC blocks gibberellin biosynthesis in higher plants, as it does in the fungus Fusarium.

CCC applied via the roots accumulated in the immature seeds and was carried over to the following generation. Consequently, growth of CCC progenies was dwarfed and flower formation inhibited. Both phenomena were overcome by application of gibberellin A3.

Three gibberellin-like substances (called fractions I, II, and III) were present in Pharbitis seeds and could be separated by thin-layer chromatography. All 3 fractions were also present in seeds treated with CCC. Fractions II and III were present in much higher quantities than fraction I. Both fractions II and III promoted growth of d5 corn but only fraction II was active in dwarf peas grown under red light.

  相似文献   

8.
We investigated the effect of overexpressing a pumpkin gibberellin (GA) 20-oxidase gene encoding an enzyme that forms predominantly biologically inactive products on GA biosynthesis and plant morphology in transgenic lettuce (Lactuca sativa cv Vanguard) plants. Lettuce was transformed with the pumpkin GA 20-oxidase gene downstream of a strong constitutive promoter cassette (El2-35S-Omega). The transgenic plants in which the pumpkin gene was detected by polymerase chain reaction were dwarfed in the T(2) generation, whereas transformants with a normal growth phenotype did not contain the transgene. The result of Southern-blot analysis showed that the transgene was integrated as a single copy; the plants segregated three dwarfs to one normal in the T(2) generation, indicating that the transgene was stable and dominant. The endogenous levels of GA(1) and GA(4) were reduced in the dwarfs, whereas large amounts of GA(17) and GA(25), which are inactive products of the pumpkin GA 20-oxidase, accumulated in these lines. These results indicate that a functional pumpkin GA 20-oxidase is expressed in the transgenic lettuce, resulting in a diversion of the normal pathway of GA biosynthesis to inactive products. Furthermore, this technique may be useful for controlling plant stature in other agricultural and horticultural species.  相似文献   

9.
We have used fusions of gibberellin biosynthesis enzymes to green fluorescent protein (GFP) to determine the subcellular localization of the early steps of the pathway. Gibberellin biosynthesis from geranylgeranyl diphosphate is catalysed by enzymes of the terpene cyclase, cytochrome P450 mono-oxygenase and 2-oxoglutarate-dependent dioxygenase classes. We show that the N-terminal pre-sequences of the Arabidopsis thaliana terpene cyclases copalyl diphosphate synthase (AtCPS1) and ent-kaurene synthase (AtKS1) direct GFP to chloroplasts in transient assays following microprojectile bombardment of tobacco leaves. The AtKS1-GFP fusion is also imported by isolated pea chloroplasts. The N-terminal portion of the cytochrome P450 protein ent-kaurene oxidase (AtKO1) directs GFP to chloroplasts in tobacco leaf transient assays. Chloroplast import assays with 35S-labelled AtKO1 protein show that it is targeted to the outer face of the chloroplast envelope. The leader sequences of the two ent-kaurenoic acid oxidases (AtKAO1 and AtKAO2) from Arabidopsis direct GFP to the endoplasmic reticulum. These data suggest that the AtKO1 protein links the plastid- and endoplasmic reticulum-located steps of the gibberellin biosynthesis pathway by association with the outer envelope of the plastid.  相似文献   

10.
Zhu S  Gao F  Cao X  Chen M  Ye G  Wei C  Li Y 《Plant physiology》2005,139(4):1935-1945
The mechanisms of viral diseases are a major focus of biology. Despite intensive investigations, how a plant virus interacts with host factors to cause diseases remains poorly understood. The Rice dwarf virus (RDV), a member of the genus Phytoreovirus, causes dwarfed growth phenotypes in infected rice (Oryza sativa) plants. The outer capsid protein P2 is essential during RDV infection of insects and thus influences transmission of RDV by the insect vector. However, its role during RDV infection within the rice host is unknown. By yeast two-hybrid and coimmunoprecipitation assays, we report that P2 of RDV interacts with ent-kaurene oxidases, which play a key role in the biosynthesis of plant growth hormones gibberellins, in infected plants. Furthermore, the expression of ent-kaurene oxidases was reduced in the infected plants. The level of endogenous GA1 (a major active gibberellin in rice vegetative tissues) in the RDV-infected plants was lower than that in healthy plants. Exogenous application of GA3 to RDV-infected rice plants restored the normal growth phenotypes. These results provide evidence that the P2 protein of RDV interferes with the function of a cellular factor, through direct physical interactions, that is important for the biosynthesis of a growth hormone leading to symptom expression. In addition, the interaction between P2 and rice ent-kaurene oxidase-like proteins may decrease phytoalexin biosynthesis and make plants more competent for virus replication. Moreover, P2 may provide a novel tool to investigate the regulation of GA metabolism for plant growth and development.  相似文献   

11.
Gibberellins are ent-kaurene derived phytohormones that are involved in seed germination, stem elongation, and flower induction in seed plants, as well as in antheridia formation and spore germination in ferns. Although ubiquitous in vascular plants, the occurrence and potential function(s) of gibberellins in bryophytes have not yet been resolved. To determine the potential role of gibberellin and/or gibberellin-like compounds in mosses, the effect of AMO-1618 on spores of Physcomitrella patens (Hedw.) B.S.G. was tested. AMO-1618, which inhibited ent-kaurene and gibberellin biosynthesis in angiosperms, also inhibited the bifunctional copalyl diphosphate synthase (E.C. 5.5.1.13)/ent-kaurene synthase (E.C. 4.2.3.19) of P. patens. AMO-1618 also caused a decrease in spore germination rates of P. patens, and this inhibitory effect was less pronounced in the presence of ent-kaurene. These results suggest that ent-kaurene biosynthesis is required by P. patens spores to germinate, implying the presence of gibberellin-like phytohormones in mosses.  相似文献   

12.
Phytochrome B-deficient plants exhibit increased gibberellin (GA) levels or responsiveness, which may contribute to their elongated growth and reduced chlorophyll levels. We have investigated the effects of applications of gibberellic acid and an inhibitor of gibberellin biosynthesis, ancymidol, on wild-type and phytochrome B-antisense potato (Solanum tuberosum ssp. andigena) plants. The results showed that some phenotypes of the phytochrome B-antisense plants, i.e. increased stem length and reduced chlorophyll, can be mimicked by treating wild-type plants with gibberellic acid. However, another phenotype, i.e. tuberisation response in long days, is mimicked by application of a GA biosynthesis inhibitor ancymidol, thus appearing to be the result of a reduction in the gibberellin levels. A simple increase in gibberellin levels or sensitivity is, therefore, not sufficient to explain the phenotype of the antisense plants.  相似文献   

13.
CCC-Induced increase of gibberellin levels in pea seedlings   总被引:1,自引:1,他引:0  
D. M. Reid  A. Crozier 《Planta》1970,94(2):95-106
Summary Pea seedlings (cv. Alaska), were treated with two concentrations of (2-chloroethyl)trimethylammonium chloride (CCC) and choline chloride. Treatment with 1 mg/l CCC resulted in as much as a 150fold increase in endogenous gibberellin (GA) levels without there being any parallel stimulation of growth. Plants grown in 1,000 mg/l CCC were severely dwarfed but contained GA levels not significantly different from control plants grown in distilled water. CCC also retarded GA3-induced growth of pea seedlings. These effects appear to be CCC specific as the CCC analogue choline chloride affected neither the GA content of pea seedlings nor their response to GA3. The lack of correlation between endogenous GA levels and stem height suggests that in peas the predominant factor in CCC-induced inhibition of stem growth is not related to an effect of CCC on GA biosynthesis.Supported by National Research Council (Canada) grant A-5727.Supported by a Postdoctoral Fellowship from NRC Grant A-2585 to R.P. Pharis.  相似文献   

14.
Barley (Hordeum vulgare L. C.I.666) was shown to be susceptibleto the growth retardant (2-chloroethyl)-trimethylammonium chloride(CCC). The estimation of cell number in the dwarfed third leafblade indicated that a decrease in mitotic activity had occurredin treated plants. There was also a decrease in cell size intreated plants. The dwarfing action of CCC was reversed by exogenousgibberellic acid (GA3) but this was shown to be the result ofincreased cell elongation only. GA3 did not promote cell divisionin healthy or CCC-treated plants. Assay of endogenous gibberellinsshowed a significant reduction in the level of a substance correspondingto GA3 in CCC-treated plants. It is suggested that CCC-induceddwarfing of barley is largely the result of a reduction in meristematicactivity. This may be related to an effect on gibberellin biosynthesisbut is not reversed by the application of exogenous GA 3.  相似文献   

15.
The nonallelicgib-1 andgib-3 tomato (Lycopersion esculentum Mill.) mutants are gibberellin deficient and exhibit a dwarfed growth habit. Previous work has shown that this dwarfed growth pattern can be reversed by the application of a number of gibberellins and their precursors, includingent-kaurene (ent-kaur-16-ene). This indicates that they are blocked in gibberellin biosynthesis at a step prior toent-kaurene metabolism. The normal accumulation of carotenoids observed in these mutants suggests a functionally normal isoprenoid pathway.Ent-kaurene is synthesized from geranylgeranyl pyrophosphate in a two-step process with copalyl pyrophosphate as an intermediate.In vitro assays using young fruit extracts from wild-type andgib-2 plants resulted in the conversion of geranylgeranyl pyrophosphate to copalyl pyrophosphate, and the conversion of copalyl pyrophosphate toentkaurene. Similar assays usinggib-1 plants indicated a reduced ability for synthesis of copalyl pyrophosphate from geranylgeranyl pyrophosphate, and thus a reducedent-kaurene synthetase A activity. Furthermore,gib-3 extracts demonstrated a reduced ability to synthesizeent-kaurene from copalyl pyrophosphate, and thus a reducedent-kaurene synthetase B activity. These results establish the enzymatic conversion of geranylgeranyl pyrophosphate to copalyl pyrophosphate, and copalyl pyrophosphate toent-kaurene, as the sites of the mutations ingib-1 andgib-3 tomatoes, respectively. We also note that tomato fruit extracts contain components which are inhibitory toent-kaurene synthesis.  相似文献   

16.
The nonallelicgib-1 andgib-3 tomato (Lycopersion esculentum Mill.) mutants are gibberellin deficient and exhibit a dwarfed growth habit. Previous work has shown that this dwarfed growth pattern can be reversed by the application of a number of gibberellins and their precursors, includingent-kaurene (ent-kaur-16-ene). This indicates that they are blocked in gibberellin biosynthesis at a step prior toent-kaurene metabolism. The normal accumulation of carotenoids observed in these mutants suggests a functionally normal isoprenoid pathway.Ent-kaurene is synthesized from geranylgeranyl pyrophosphate in a two-step process with copalyl pyrophosphate as an intermediate.In vitro assays using young fruit extracts from wild-type andgib-2 plants resulted in the conversion of geranylgeranyl pyrophosphate to copalyl pyrophosphate, and the conversion of copalyl pyrophosphate toentkaurene. Similar assays usinggib-1 plants indicated a reduced ability for synthesis of copalyl pyrophosphate from geranylgeranyl pyrophosphate, and thus a reducedent-kaurene synthetase A activity. Furthermore,gib-3 extracts demonstrated a reduced ability to synthesizeent-kaurene from copalyl pyrophosphate, and thus a reducedent-kaurene synthetase B activity. These results establish the enzymatic conversion of geranylgeranyl pyrophosphate to copalyl pyrophosphate, and copalyl pyrophosphate toent-kaurene, as the sites of the mutations ingib-1 andgib-3 tomatoes, respectively. We also note that tomato fruit extracts contain components which are inhibitory toent-kaurene synthesis.  相似文献   

17.
Differential screening of aGibberella fujikuroicDNA library was used to successfully clone and identify genes involved in the pathway of gibberellin biosynthesis. Several cDNA clones that hybridized preferentially to a cDNA probe prepared from mycelium induced for gibberellin production were isolated and characterized. The deduced amino acid sequences of two (identical) clones contained the conserved heme-binding motif of cytochrome P450 monooxygenases (FXXGXXXCXG). One of these cDNA fragments was used as a homologous probe for the screening of a genomic library. A hybridizing 6.7-kb genomicSalI fragment was cloned into pUC19. The sequencing of this clone revealed that a second cytochrome P450 monooxygenase gene was closely linked to the first one. Since at least four cytochrome P450 monooxygenase-catalyzed steps are involved in the synthesis of gibberellins, chromosome walking was performed to find a further gene of this family or other genes involved in gibberellin pathway. Next to the two P450 monooxygenase genes, a putative geranylgeranyl diphosphate synthase gene, the copalyl diphosphate synthase gene, which is the first specific gene of the gibberellin pathway, and a third P450 monooxygenase gene were identified. These results suggest that at least some of the genes involved in the biosynthesis of gibberellins are closely linked in a gene cluster inG. fujikuroi,as has been recently found for other “dispensable” pathways in fungi.  相似文献   

18.
Flowering of Nicotiana tabacum cv Xhanti depends on gibberellins because gibberellin-deficient plants, due to overexpression of a gibberellin 2-oxidase gene (35S:NoGA2ox3) or to treatment with the gibberellin biosynthesis inhibitor paclobutrazol, flowered later than wild type. These plants also showed inhibition of the expression of molecular markers related to floral transition (NtMADS-4 and NtMADS-11). To investigate further the role of gibberellin in flowering, we quantified its content in tobacco plants during development. We found a progressive reduction in the levels of GA1 and GA4 in the apical shoot during vegetative growth, reaching very low levels at floral transition and beyond. This excludes these two gibberellins as flowering-promoting factors in the apex. The evolution of active gibberellin content in apical shoots agrees with the expression patterns of gibberellin metabolism genes: two encoding gibberellin 20-oxidases (NtGA20ox1 = Ntc12, NtGA20ox2 = Ntc16), one encoding a gibberellin 3-oxidase (NtGA3ox1 = Nty) and one encoding a gibberellin 2-oxidase (NtGA2ox1), suggesting that active gibberellins are locally synthesized. In young apical leaves, GA1 and GA4 content and the expression of gibberellin metabolism genes were rather constant. Our results support that floral transition in tobacco, in contrast to that in Arabidopsis, is not regulated by the levels of GA1 and GA4 in apical shoots, although reaching a threshold in gibberellin levels may be necessary to allow meristem competence for flowering.  相似文献   

19.
Summary Root initiation at cuttings is inhibited by application of gibberellin. CCC does not antagonize this inhibition. However, CCC stimulates root initiation at cuttings of three different species of twining plants known to be rich in endogenous gibberellin. CCC seems to be an antagonist for endogenous but not for exogenous gibberellin, which suggests that CCC influences gibberellin biosynthesis.  相似文献   

20.
The genes for gibberellin (GA) biosynthesis are clustered in the fungus Gibberella fujikuroi. In addition to genes encoding a GA-specific geranylgeranyl diphosphate synthase and a bifunctional ent-copalyl diphosphate/ent-kaurene synthase, the cluster contains four cytochrome P450 monooxygenase genes (P450-1, -2, -3, -4). Recently it was shown that P450-4 and P450-1 encode multifunctional enzymes catalyzing the three oxidation steps from ent-kaurene to ent-kaurenoic acid and the four oxidation steps from ent-kaurenoic acid to GA14, respectively. Here we describe the functional analysis of the P450-2 gene by gene disruption and by expressing the gene in a mutant that lacks the entire GA biosynthesis gene cluster. Mutants in which P450-2 is inactivated by the insertion of a large piece of DNA accumulated GA14 and lacked biosynthetically more advanced metabolites, indicating that the gene encodes a 20-oxidase. This was confirmed by incubating lines containing P450-2 in the absence of the other GA biosynthesis genes with isotopically labeled substrates. The P450-2 gene product oxidized the 3beta-hydroxylated intermediate, GA14, and its non-hydroxylated analogue GA12 to GA4 and GA9, respectively. Expression of P450-2 is repressed by high amounts of nitrogen in the culture medium but is not affected by the presence of biosynthetically advanced GAs, i.e. there is no evidence for feedback regulation. The fact that the GA 20-oxidase is a cytochrome P450 monooxygenase in G. fujikuroi and not a 2-oxoglutarate-dependent dioxygenase as in plants, together with the significant differences in regulation of gene expression, are further evidence for independent evolution of the GA biosynthetic pathways in plants and fungi.  相似文献   

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