首页 | 本学科首页   官方微博 | 高级检索  
相似文献
 共查询到20条相似文献,搜索用时 15 毫秒
1.
A 2580-bp region of the chromosome of Streptomyces argillaceus, the producer of the antitumor polyketide mithramycin, was sequenced. Analysis of the nucleotide sequence revealed the presence of two genes (mtmGIII and mtmGIVv) encoding proteins that showed a high degree of similarity to glycosyltransferases involved in the biosynthesis of various antibiotics and antitumor drugs. Independent insertional inactivation of both genes produced mutants that did not synthesize mithramycin but accumulated several mithramycin intermediates. Both mutants accumulated premithramycinone, a non-glycosylated intermediate in mithramycin biosynthesis. The mutant affected in the mtmGIII gene also accumulated premithramycin A1, which contains premithramycinone as the aglycon unit and a D-olivose attached at C-12a-O. These experiments demonstrate that the glycosyltransferases MtmGIV and MtmGIII catalyze the first two glycosylation steps in mithramycin biosynthesis. A model is proposed for the glycosylation steps in mithramycin biosynthesis.  相似文献   

2.
Mithramycin is an antitumor polyketide drug produced by Streptomyces argillaceus that contains two deoxysugar chains, a disaccharide consisting of two d-olivoses and a trisaccharide consisting of a d-olivose, a d-oliose, and a d-mycarose. From a cosmid clone (cosAR3) which confers resistance to mithramycin in streptomycetes, a 3-kb PstI-XhoI fragment was sequenced, and two divergent genes (mtmGI and mtmGII) were identified. Comparison of the deduced products of both genes with proteins in databases showed similarities with glycosyltransferases and glucuronosyltransferases from different sources, including several glycosyltransferases involved in sugar transfer during antibiotic biosynthesis. Both genes were independently inactivated by gene replacement, and the mutants generated (M3G1 and M3G2) did not produce mithramycin. High-performance liquid chromatography analysis of ethyl acetate extracts of culture supernatants of both mutants showed the presence of several peaks with the characteristic spectra of mithramycin biosynthetic intermediates. Four compounds were isolated from both mutants by preparative high-performance liquid chromatography, and their structures were elucidated by physicochemical methods. The structures of these compounds were identical in both mutants, and the compounds are suggested to be glycosylated intermediates of mithramycin biosynthesis with different numbers of sugar moieties attached to C-12a-O of a tetracyclic mithramycin precursor and to C-2-O of mithramycinone: three tetracyclic intermediates containing one sugar (premithramycin A1), two sugars (premithramycin A2), or three sugars (premithramycin A3) and one tricyclic intermediate containing a trisaccharide chain (premithramycin A4). It is proposed that the glycosyltransferases encoded by mtmGI and mtmGII are responsible for forming and transferring the disaccharide during mithramycin biosynthesis. From the structures of the new metabolites, a new biosynthetic sequence regarding late steps of mithramycin biosynthesis can be suggested, a sequence which includes glycosyl transfer steps prior to the final shaping of the aglycone moiety of mithramycin.

Many bioactive drugs contain sugars attached to their aglycones which are usually important or, in some cases, essential for bioactivity. Most of these sugars belong to the family of the 6-deoxyhexoses (6-DOH) (18, 20, 27) and are transferred to the different aglycones as late steps in biosynthesis. Genes involved in the biosynthesis of different 6-DOH have been reported elsewhere and participate in the biosynthesis of erythromycin (9, 12, 31, 38, 39), daunorubicin (13, 26, 36), mithramycin (22), granaticin (2), streptomycin (10, 28), and tylosin (14, 23). However, information about the glycosyltransferases (GTFs) responsible for the transfer of the sugars to the respective aglycones is quite scarce. So far, only two GTFs from antibiotic producers have been biochemically characterized in detail, and they are involved in macrolide inactivation: Mgt, from Streptomyces lividans, a nonmacrolide producer (7, 17); and OleD, from the oleandomycin producer Streptomyces antibioticus (15, 29), which inactivates oleandomycin by addition of glucose to the 2′-OH group of the desosamine attached to the macrolactone ring (40). In the last several years, a few genes have been proposed to encode GTFs involved in the transfer of sugars to various aglycones during biosynthesis: dnrS and dnrH, from Streptomyces peucetius, involved in daunorubicin (26) and baumycin (36) biosynthesis, respectively; gra-orf5, involved in granaticin biosynthesis (2); eryCIII and eryBV, involved in the transfer of desosamine and mycarose, respectively, in erythromycin biosynthesis (12, 32, 38); and tylM2, from Streptomyces fradiae, involved in sugar transfer during tylosin biosynthesis (14).Mithramycin (Fig. (Fig.1)1) is an aromatic polyketide which shows antibacterial activity against gram-positive bacteria and also antitumor activity (30, 37). Together with the chromomycins and the olivomycins, mithramycin constitutes the so-called aureolic acid group of antitumor drugs. The polyketide moiety of mithramycin is derived from the condensation of 10 acetate building blocks in a series of reactions catalyzed by a type II polyketide synthase (5, 21). The mithramycin aglycone is glycosylated at positions 6 and 2 with disaccharide (d-olivose- d-olivose) and trisaccharide (d-olivose-d-oliose-d-mycarose) moieties, respectively. All of these sugars belong to the 6-DOH family. In the mithramycin pathway, two genes (mtmD and mtmE) encoding two enzymes (glucose-1-phosphate:TTP thymidylyl transferase and dTDP-4,6-dehydratase, respectively) involved in the biosynthesis of the mithramycin 6-DOH have been cloned, and their participation in mithramycin biosynthesis has been demonstrated by insertional inactivation (22). Here we report the characterization of two Streptomyces argillaceus genes (mtmGI and mtmGII) that encode two putative GTFs responsible for the formation and transfer of the disaccharide chain. Inactivation of these genes by gene replacement showed identical accumulated compounds and allowed the isolation of four glycosylated compounds which are likely to be intermediates in mithramycin biosynthesis. Open in a separate windowFIG. 1Structures of mithramycin, premithramycinone, and the new premithramycins.  相似文献   

3.
Cereal opaque-kernel mutants are ideal genetic materials for studying the mechanism of starch biosynthesis and amyloplast development. Here we isolated and identified two allelic floury endosperm 8 (flo8) mutants of rice, named flo8-1 and flo8-2. In the flo8 mutant, the starch content was decreased and the normal physicochemical features of starch were altered. Map-based cloning and subsequent DNA sequencing analysis revealed a single nucleotide substitution and an 8-bp insertion occurred in UDP-glucose pyrophosphorylase 1 (Ugp1) gene in flo8-1 and flo8-2, respectively. Complementation of the flo8-1 mutant restored normal seed appearance by expressing full length coding sequence of Ugp1. RT-qPCR analysis revealed that Ugp1 was ubiquitously expressed. Mutation caused the decreased UGPase activity and affected the expression of most of genes associated with starch biosynthesis. Meanwhile, western blot and enzyme activity analyses showed the comparability of protein levels and enzyme activity of most tested starch biosynthesis related genes. Our results demonstrate that Ugp1 plays an important role for starch biosynthesis in rice endosperm.  相似文献   

4.
5.

Main conclusion

We present a comprehensive overview on flavonoid-related phenotypes of A. thaliana tt and tds mutants, provide tools for their characterisation, increase the number of available alleles and demonstrate that tds3 is allelic to tt12 and tds5 to aha10.Flavonoid biosynthesis is one of the best-studied secondary metabolite pathways in plants. In the model system Arabidopsis thaliana it leads to the synthesis of three phenolic compound classes: flavonol glycosides, anthocyanins and proanthocyanidins (PAs). PAs appear brown in their oxidised polymeric forms, and most A. thaliana mutants impaired in flavonoid accumulation were identified through screens for lack of this seed coat pigmentation. These mutants are referred to as transparent testa (tt) or tannin-deficient seed (tds). More than 20 mutants of these types have been published, probably representing most of the genes relevant for PA accumulation in A. thaliana. However, data about the genes involved in PA deposition or oxidation are still rather scarce. Also, for some of the known mutants it is unclear if they represent additional loci or if they are allelic to known genes. For the present study, we have performed a systematic phenotypic characterisation of almost all available tt and tds mutants and built a collection of mutants in the genetic background of the accession Columbia to minimise effects arising from ecotype variation. We have identified a novel tt6 allele from a forward genetic screen and demonstrated that tds3 is allelic to tt12 and tds5 to aha10.
  相似文献   

6.
7.
8.
Klebsiella pneumoniae is a 2,3-butanediol producer, and R-acetoin is an intermediate of 2,3-butanediol production. R-acetoin accumulation and dissimilation in K. pneumoniae was studied here. A budC mutant, which has lost 2,3-butanediol dehydrogenase activity, accumulated high levels of R-acetoin in culture broth. However, after glucose was exhausted, the accumulated R-acetoin could be reused by the cells as a carbon source. Acetoin dehydrogenase enzyme system, encoded by acoABCD, was responsible for R-acetoin dissimilation. acoABCD mutants lost the ability to grow on acetoin as the sole carbon source, and the acetoin accumulated could not be dissimilated. However, in the presence of another carbon source, the acetoin accumulated in broth of acoABCD mutants was converted to 2,3-butanediol. Parameters of R-acetoin production by budC mutants were optimized in batch culture. Aerobic culture and mildly acidic conditions (pH 6–6.5) favored R-acetoin accumulation. At the optimized conditions, in fed-batch fermentation, 62.3 g/L R-acetoin was produced by budC and acoABCD double mutant in 57 h culture, with an optical purity of 98.0 %, and a substrate conversion ratio of 28.7 %.  相似文献   

9.
Fungal development and secondary metabolism are closely associated via the activities of the fungal NK-kB-type velvet regulators that are highly conserved in filamentous fungi. Here, we investigated the roles of the velvet genes in the aflatoxigenic fungus Aspergillus flavus. Distinct from other Aspergillus species, the A. flavus genome contains five velvet genes, veA, velB, velC, velD, and vosA. The deletion of velD blocks the production of aflatoxin B1, but does not affect the formation of sclerotia. Expression analyses revealed that vosA and velB mRNAs accumulated at high levels during the late phase of asexual development and in conidia. The absence of vosA or velB decreased the content of conidial trehalose and the tolerance of conidia to the thermal and UV stresses. In addition, double mutant analyses demonstrated that VosA and VelB play an inter-dependent role in trehalose biosynthesis and conidial stress tolerance. Together with the findings of previous studies, the results of the present study suggest that the velvet regulators play the conserved and vital role in sporogenesis, conidial trehalose biogenesis, stress tolerance, and aflatoxin biosynthesis in A. flavus.  相似文献   

10.
Dioscorea plants produce pharmaceutical diosgenin, which usually exists in plants in the form of saponins and has been a starting material for the production of steroids over seven decades. The first step of steroidal saponin biosynthesis from the corresponding aglycone is glycosylation by 3-O-sterol glycosyltransferase (S3GT), transferring the glycosyl from a sugar donor to the 3-OH position of the aglycone. In this study, a DzS3GT gene from Dioscorea zingiberensis was cloned and expressed in Escherichia coli, and the recombinant DzS3GT protein showed 3-O-sterol glycosyltransferase activity in vitro. Subcellular localization analysis revealed that the DzS3GT protein is located in the cytoplasm in rice protoplasts. The tissue profiles of DzS3GT differ from those reported SGT genes. DzS3GT is expressed strongly in leaves and very weakly in stems. The diosgenin 3-O-glucoside (trillin) content is much higher in the leaves than in other organs. The specificity of gene expression and saponins accumulation suggest that the biosynthesis of trillin may occur mainly in the leaves of D. zingiberensis. This is the first report of the cloning and biochemical characterization of a glycosyltransferase gene involved in the biosynthesis of diosgenin 3-O-glucoside in Dioscorea plants. In addition, the study provides a potential relevance to the biosynthesis and transport mechanism of steroidal saponins in Dioscorea plants.  相似文献   

11.

Background

Avian pathogenic Escherichia coli (APEC) is the infectious agent of a wide variety of avian diseases, which causes substantial economic losses to the poultry industry worldwide. Polyamines contribute to the optimal synthesis of nucleic acids and proteins in bacteria. The objectives of this study were to investigate; i) whether APEC E. coli encodes the same systems for biosynthesis and uptake as described for E. coli K12 and ii) the role of polyamines during in vitro growth of an avian pathogenic E. coli strain (WT-ST117- O83:H4T).

Results

Following whole genome sequencing, polyamine biosynthesis and export genes present in E. coli MG1655 (K-12) were found to be identical in WT-ST117. Defined mutants were constructed in putrescine and spermidine biosynthesis pathways (ΔspeB, ΔspeC, ΔspeF, ΔspeB/C and ΔspeD/E), and in polyamines transport systems (ΔpotE, ΔyeeF, ΔpotABCD and ΔpotFGHI). Contrary to what was observed for MG1655, the ΔpotE-ST117 mutant was growth attenuated, regardless of putrescine supplementation. The addition of spermidine or orthinine restored the growth to the level of WT-ST117. Growth attenuation after induction of membrane stress by SDS suggested that PotE is involved in protection against this stress. The ΔspeB/C-ST117 mutant was also growth attenuated in minimal medium. The addition of putrescine or spermidine to the media restored growth rate to the wild type level. The remaining biosynthesis and transport mutants showed a growth similar to that of WT-ST117. Analysis by Ultra-High Performance Liquid Chromatography revealed that the ΔspeB/C mutant was putrescine-deficient, despite that the gene speF, which is also involved in the synthesis of putrescine, was expressed.

Conclusions

Deletion of the putrescine transport system, PotE, or the putrescine biosynthesis pathway genes speB/C affected in vitro growth of APEC (ST117- O83:H4) strain, but not E. coli MG1655, despite the high similarity of the genetic make-up of biosynthesis and transport genes. Therefore, blocking these metabolic reactions may be a suitable way to prevent APEC growth in the host without disturbing the commensal E. coli population.
  相似文献   

12.
Aspergillus flavus often invade many important corps and produce harmful aflatoxins both in preharvest and during storage stages. The regulation mechanism of aflatoxin biosynthesis in this fungus has not been well explored mainly due to the lack of an efficient transformation method for constructing a genome-wide gene mutant library. This challenge was resolved in this study, where a reliable and efficient Agrobacterium tumefaciens-mediated transformation (ATMT) protocol for A. flavus NRRL 3357 was established. The results showed that removal of multinucleate conidia, to collect a homogenous sample of uninucleate conidia for use as the transformation material, is the key step in this procedure. A. tumefaciens strain AGL-1 harboring the ble gene for zeocin resistance under the control of the gpdA promoter from A. nidulans is suitable for genetic transformation of this fungus. We successfully generated A. flavus transformants with an efficiency of ~ 60 positive transformants per 106 conidia using our protocol. A small-scale insertional mutant library (~ 1,000 mutants) was constructed using this method and the resulting several mutants lacked both production of conidia and aflatoxin biosynthesis capacity. Southern blotting analysis demonstrated that the majority of the transformants contained a single T-DNA insert on the genome. To the best of our knowledge, this is the first report of genetic transformation of A. flavus via ATMT and our protocol provides an effective tool for construction of genome-wide gene mutant libraries for functional analysis of important genes in A. flavus.  相似文献   

13.
The crosstalk between auxin and cytokinin (CK) is important for plant growth and development, although the underlying molecular mechanisms remain unclear. Here, we describe the isolation and characterization of a mutant of Arabidopsis Cytokinin-induced Root Curling 6 (CKRC6), an allele of ANTHRANILATE SYNTHASE ALPHA SUBUNIT 1 (ASA1) that encodes the á-subunit of AS in tryptophan (Trp) biosynthesis. The ckrc6 mutant exhibits root gravitropic defects and insensitivity to both CK and the ethylene precursor 1-aminocyclopropane-1-carboxylicacid (ACC) in primary root growth. These defects can be rescued by exogenous indole-3-acetic acid (IAA) or tryptophan (Trp) supplementation. Furthermore, our results suggest that the ckrc6 mutant has decreased IAA content, differential expression patterns of auxin biosynthesis genes and CK biosynthesis isopentenyl transferase (IPT) genes in comparison to wild type. Collectively, our study shows that auxin controls CK biosynthesis based on that CK sensitivity is altered in most auxin-resistant mutants and that CKs promote auxin biosynthesis but inhibit auxin transport and response. Our results also suggest that CKRC6/ASA1 may be located at an intersection of auxin, CK and ethylene metabolism and/or signaling.  相似文献   

14.

Key message

pap1 - D/fls1ko double mutant plants that produce substantial amounts of anthocyanin show tolerance to abiotic stress.

Abstract

Anthocyanins are flavonoids that are abundant in various plants and have beneficial effects on both plants and humans. Many genes in flavonoid biosynthetic pathways have been identified, including those in the MYB-bHLH-WD40 (MBW) complex. The MYB gene Production of Anthocyanin Pigment 1 (PAP1) plays a particularly important role in anthocyanin accumulation. PAP1 expression in many plant systems strongly increases anthocyanin levels, resulting in a dark purple color in many plant organs. In this study, we generated double mutant plants that harbor fls1ko in the pap1-D background (i.e., pap1-D/fls1ko plants), to examine whether anthocyanins can be further enhanced by blocking flavonol biosynthesis under PAP1 overexpression. We also wanted to examine whether the increased anthocyanin levels contribute to defense against osmotic stresses. The pap1-D/fls1ko mutants accumulated higher anthocyanin levels than pap1-D plants in both control and sucrose-treated conditions. However, flavonoid biosynthesis genes were slightly down-regulated in the pap1-D/fls1ko seedlings as compared to their expression in pap1-D seedlings. We also report the performance of pap1-D/fls1ko seedlings in response to plant osmotic stresses.
  相似文献   

15.
16.
The sequences of the PsSst1 and PsIgn1 genes of pea (Pisum sativum L.) homologous to the symbiotic LjSST1 and LjIGN1 genes of Lotus japonicus (Regel.) K. Larsen are determined. The expression level of PsSst1 and PsIgn1 genes is determined by real-time PCR in nodules of several symbiotic mutants and original lines of pea. Lines with increased (Sprint-2Fix (Pssym31)) and decreased (P61 (Pssym25)) expression level of both genes are revealed along with the lines characterized by changes in the expression level of only one of these genes. The revealed features of the PsSst1 and PsIgn1 expression allow us to expand the phenotypic characterization of pea symbiotic mutants. In addition, PsSst1 and PsIgn1 cDNA is sequenced in selected mutant lines, characterized by a decreased expression level of these genes in nodules, but no mutations are found.  相似文献   

17.
Flavonoids are specialized plant secondary metabolites that are mainly present as glycoconjugates and function as attractants to pollinators and symbionts, UV protectants, allelochemicals, and have antimicrobial and antiherbivore activity for plant health. Because of the heterogeneity of UDP-glycosyltransferases (UGTs) for glycosylation in plants, their function in flavonoid glycosylation remains largely unknown in soybean and other legumes, particularly that of the UGT92 genes. Here, we identified 152 putative UGT92 genes across 48 plant species and elucidated their mode of duplication, expansion/deletion pattern, alignment, phylogenetic analysis, and genome-wide distribution. Two novel UGT-encoding genes Glyma14g04790 (UGT92G1) and Glyma15g03670 (UGT92G2) were isolated from soybean and their heterologous expression was optimized in Escherichia. coli. Both genes exhibited catalytic activity toward quercetin, kaempferol, and myricetin, with UDPglucose as the sugar donor and were characterized as flavanol-specific UGTs. High expression of both UGTs was observed in adaxial and abaxial parenchyma, suspensor cells, and adaxial and abaxial epidermis cells during seed development, suggesting that they are seed-specific flavanol glycosyltransferases in soybean. Co-expression analysis of UGT92 genes with their first and second neighborhood genes provided a basis for their network elucidation in soybean. We provide valuable information on the role of UGT92 in seed development via the glycosylation of multiple flavanols and the potential metabolic engineering of flavonoid compounds in both plants and E. coli.  相似文献   

18.

Objective

To identify new enzymatic bottlenecks of l-tyrosine pathway for further improving the production of l-tyrosine and its derivatives.

Result

When ARO4 and ARO7 were deregulated by their feedback resistant derivatives in the host strains, the ARO2 and TYR1 genes, coding for chorismate synthase and prephenate dehydrogenase were further identified as new important rate-limiting steps. The yield of p-coumaric acid in the feedback-resistant strain overexpressing ARO2 or TYR1, was significantly increased from 6.4 to 16.2 and 15.3 mg l?1, respectively. Subsequently, we improved the strain by combinatorial engineering of pathway genes increasing the yield of p-coumaric acid by 12.5-fold (from 1.7 to 21.3 mg l?1) compared with the wild-type strain. Batch cultivations revealed that p-coumaric acid production was correlated with cell growth, and the formation of by-product acetate of the best producer NK-M6 increased to 31.1 mM whereas only 19.1 mM acetate was accumulated by the wild-type strain.

Conclusion

Combinatorial metabolic engineering provides a new strategy for further improvement of l-tyrosine or other metabolic biosynthesis pathways in S. cerevisiae.
  相似文献   

19.
20.
设为首页 | 免责声明 | 关于勤云 | 加入收藏

Copyright©北京勤云科技发展有限公司  京ICP备09084417号