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1.
Opium poppy, Papaver somniferum, is cultivated for its alkaloid-rich latex. Tyrosine decarboxylase (TyDC) is the first enzyme in poppy alkaloid biosynthesis and is encoded by a small gene family. A 2,060-bp promoter fragment of TyDC5 was translationally fused to the #-glucuronidase (GUS) reporter gene and introduced into poppy and tobacco (Nicotiana tabacum). Transgenic seedlings were stained for GUS activity which localized to the xylem parenchyma in the shoots of poppy and tobacco. Roots of both species had similar expression patterns with staining in the vascular cylinder surrounding the xylem. No staining was observed in poppy laticifers suggesting that other TyDC genes may be expressed in latex or that alkaloid precursors are supplied to laticifers by adjacent cells.  相似文献   

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The biosynthesis of papaverine proceeds via (S)-reticuline   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
Papaverine is one of the earliest opium alkaloids for which a biosynthetic hypothesis was developed on theoretical grounds. Norlaudanosoline (=tetrahydropapaveroline) was claimed as the immediate precursor alkaloid for a multitude of nitrogen containing plant metabolites. This tetrahydroxylated compound was proposed to be fully O-methylated. The resulting tetrahydropapaverine should then aromatize to papaverine. In view of experimental data, this pathway has to be revised. Precursor administration to 8-day-old seedlings of Papaver followed by direct examination of the metabolic fate of the stable-isotope-labeled precursors in the total plant extract, without further purification of the metabolites, led to elucidation of the papaverine pathway in vivo. The central and earliest benzylisoquinoline alkaloid is not the tetraoxygenated norlaudanosoline, but instead the trihydroxylated norcoclaurine that is further converted into (S)-reticuline, the established precursor for poppy alkaloids. The papaverine pathway is opened by the methylation of (S)-reticuline to generate (S)-laudanine. A second methylation at the 3′ position of laudanine leads to laudanosine, both known alkaloids from the opium poppy. Subsequent N-demethylation of laudanosine yields the known precursor of papaverine: tetrahydropapaverine. Inspection of the subsequent aromatization reaction established the presence of an intermediate, 1,2-dihydropapaverine, which has been characterized. The final step to papaverine is dehydrogenation of the 1,2-bond, yielding the target compound papaverine. We conclusively show herein that the previously claimed norreticuline does not play a role in the biosynthesis of papaverine.  相似文献   

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《Gene》1996,179(1):73-81
Tetrahydrobenzylisoquinoline alkaloids comprise a diverse class of secondary metabolites with many pharmacologically active members. The biosynthesis at the enzyme level of at least two tetrahydrobenzylisoquinoline alkaloids, the benzophenanthridine alkaloid sanguinarine in the California poppy, Eschscholtzia californica, and the bisbenzylisoquinoline alkaloid berbamunine in barberry, Berberis stolonifera, has been elucidated in detail starting from the aromatic amino acid (aa) l-tyrosine. In an initial attempt to develop alternate systems for the production of medicinally important alkaloids, one enzyme from each pathway (BBE, a covalently flavinylated enzyme of benzophenanthridine alkaloid biosynthesis and CYP80, a phenol coupling cytochrome P-450-dependent oxidase of bisbenzylisoquinoline alkaloid biosynthesis) has been purified to homogeneity, a partial aa sequence determined, and the corresponding cDNAs isolated with aid of synthetic oligos based on the aa sequences. The recombinant enzymes were actively expressed in Spodoptera frugiperda Sf9 cells using a baculovirus vector, purified and then characterized. Insect cell culture has proven to be a powerful system for the overexpression of alkaloid biosynthetic genes.  相似文献   

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Background  

Opium poppy (Papaver somniferum) produces a diverse array of bioactive benzylisoquinoline alkaloids and has emerged as a model system to study plant alkaloid metabolism. The plant is cultivated as the only commercial source of the narcotic analgesics morphine and codeine, but also produces many other alkaloids including the antimicrobial agent sanguinarine. Modulations in plant secondary metabolism as a result of environmental perturbations are often associated with the altered regulation of other metabolic pathways. As a key component of our functional genomics platform for opium poppy we have used proton nuclear magnetic resonance (1H NMR) metabolomics to investigate the interplay between primary and secondary metabolism in cultured opium poppy cells treated with a fungal elicitor.  相似文献   

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The variability of the contents of tropane and isoquinoline alkaloids, ashes, Na, K, Ca, Mg, Fe, Mn, Cu, Zn, Co, Mo, Cr, Al, Ba, V, Ni, Sr, Cd, Pb, J, and Ag was studied in individual plants of the industrial population of belladonna (Atropa belladonna L.) and yellow horned poppy (Glaucium flavum Crantz.). Numerous linear and nonlinear correlations of isoquinoline and tropane alkaloids with ashes and mineral elements were revealed by means of correlation and regression analyses. Alkaline earth elements (especially Sr and Ba) were shown to have a major role in the regulation of tropane alkaloid accumulation in belladonna leaves. K and Ni were of particular importance in the aerial part of yellow horned poppy. These elements at the suboptimal concentrations were most favorable for isoquinoline alkaloid accumulation in yellow horned poppy. Analytical mathematical models were derived for the regulation of alkaloid metabolism in test plants by some mineral elements (Ba, Mg, Al, Sr, Ni, Mn, and K). Our results indicate that the interrelation between alkaloids and elements in these plants is genetically determined.  相似文献   

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The biosynthesis of the five major alkaloids of the opium poppy (Papaver somniferum L. from radioactive dihydroxyphenylalanine has been studied in the 1000 g, 10 000 g, 100 000 g pellets and the 100 000 g supernatant fractions of the capsule latex. A normal poppy variety as well as one which produces only traces of alkaloids were used. Definite evidence of biosynthesis was obtained for both varieties but only in the 1 000 g pellet (as previously reported . None was found in the other fractions although electron microscopy showed that organelles, including vesicles, were present. The amounts of alkaloid biosynthesized however were very small relative to the amounts involved in the rapid changes already reported for the developing capsules. In contrast, all fractions of the latex were able to metabolize T-morphine in vitro, with the 100 000 g supernatant showing the highest activity and the amounts involved were also consistent with the changes found in the living plant.  相似文献   

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Opium poppy (Papaver somniferum) is one of the world’s oldest medicinal plants and remains the only commercial source for the narcotic analgesics morphine, codeine and semi-synthetic derivatives such as oxycodone and naltrexone. The plant also produces several other benzylisoquinoline alkaloids with potent pharmacological properties including the vasodilator papaverine, the cough suppressant and potential anticancer drug noscapine and the antimicrobial agent sanguinarine. Opium poppy has served as a model system to investigate the biosynthesis of benzylisoquinoline alkaloids in plants. The application of biochemical and functional genomics has resulted in a recent surge in the discovery of biosynthetic genes involved in the formation of major benzylisoquinoline alkaloids in opium poppy. The availability of extensive biochemical genetic tools and information pertaining to benzylisoquinoline alkaloid metabolism is facilitating the study of a wide range of phenomena including the structural biology of novel catalysts, the genomic organization of biosynthetic genes, the cellular and sub-cellular localization of biosynthetic enzymes and a variety of biotechnological applications. In this review, we highlight recent developments and summarize the frontiers of knowledge regarding the biochemistry, cellular biology and biotechnology of benzylisoquinoline alkaloid biosynthesis in opium poppy.  相似文献   

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Summary Opium poppy (Papaver somniferum L.) contains a number of pharmaceutically important alkaloids of the benzylisoquinoline type including morphine, codeine, papaverine, and sanguinarine. Although these alkaloids accumulate to high concentrations in various organs of the intact plant, only the phytoalexin sanguinarine has been found at significant levels in opium poppy cell cultures. Moreover, even sanguinarine biosynthesis is not constitutive in poppy cell suspension cultures, but is typically induced only after treatment with a funga-derived elicitor. The absence of appreciable quantities of alkaloids in dedifferentiated opium poppy cell cultures suggests that benzylisoquinoline alkaloid biosynthesis is developmentally regulated and requires the differentiation of specific tissues. In the 40 yr since opium poppy tissues were first culturedin vitro, a number of reports on the redifferentiation of roots and buds from callus have appeared. A requirement for the presence of specialized laticifer cells has been suggested before certain alkaloids, such as morphine and codeine, can accumulate. Laticifers represent a complex internal secretory system in about 15 plant families and appear to have multiple evolutionary origins. Opium poppy laticifers differentiate from procambial cells and undergo articulation and anastomosis to form a continuous network of elements associated with the phloem throughout much of the intact plant. Latex is the combined cytoplasm of fused laticifer vessels, and contains numerous large alkaloid vesicles in which latex-associated poppy alkaloids are sequestered. The formation of alkaloid vesicles, the subcellular compartmentation of alkaloid biosynthesis, and the tissue-specific localization and control of these processes are important unresolved problems in plant cell biology. Alkaloid biosynthesis in opium poppy is an excellent model system to investigate the developmental regulation and cell biology of complex metabolic pathways, and the relationship between metabolic regulation and cell-type specific differentiation. In this review, we summarize the literature on the roles of cellular differentiation and plant development in alkaloid biosynthesis in opium poppy plants and tissue cultures.  相似文献   

12.
Noscapine biosynthesis in opium poppy is thought to occur via N-methylcanadine, which would be produced through 9-O-methylation of (S)-scoulerine, methylenedioxy bridge formation on (S)-tetrahydrocolumbamine, and N-methylation of (S)-canadine. Only scoulerine 9-O-methyltransferase has been functionally characterized. We report the isolation and characterization of a cytochrome P450 (CYP719A21) from opium poppy that converts (S)-tetrahydrocolumbamine to (S)-canadine. Recombinant CYP719A21 displayed strict substrate specificity and high affinity (Km = 4.63 ± 0.71 μM) for (S)-tetrahydrocolumbamine. Virus-induced gene silencing of CYP719A21 caused a significant increase in (S)-tetrahydrocolumbamine accumulation and a corresponding decrease in the levels of putative downstream intermediates and noscapine in opium poppy plants.  相似文献   

13.
Morphine is a powerful analgesic natural product produced by the opium poppy Papaver somniferum. Although formal syntheses of this alkaloid have been reported, the morphine molecule contains five stereocenters and a C-C phenol linkage that to date render a total synthesis of morphine commercially unfeasible. The C-C phenol-coupling reaction along the biosynthetic pathway to morphine in opium poppy is catalyzed by the cytochrome P450-dependent oxygenase salutaridine synthase. We report herein on the identification of salutaridine synthase as a member of the CYP719 family of cytochromes P450 during a screen of recombinant cytochromes P450 of opium poppy functionally expressed in Spodoptera frugiperda Sf9 cells. Recombinant CYP719B1 is a highly stereo- and regioselective enzyme; of forty-one compounds tested as potential substrates, only (R)-reticuline and (R)-norreticuline resulted in formation of a product (salutaridine and norsalutaridine, respectively). To date, CYP719s have been characterized catalyzing only the formation of a methylenedioxy bridge in berberine biosynthesis (canadine synthase, CYP719A1) and in benzo[c]phenanthridine biosynthesis (stylopine synthase, CYP719A14). Previously identified phenol-coupling enzymes of plant alkaloid biosynthesis belong only to the CYP80 family of cytochromes. CYP719B1 therefore is the prototype for a new family of plant cytochromes P450 that catalyze formation of a phenol-couple.The C-O or C-C phenol-couple is widely present in the plant kingdom in natural product biosynthetic processes such as alkaloid (1), lignan (2), lignin (3), and gallotannin (4) formation. Phenol-coupling reactions in nature were thought to be catalyzed by a variety of oxidative enzymes with broad substrate specificity such as peroxidases, polyphenol oxidases, and laccases. More recently, several enzymes discovered to be responsible for the formation of intermolecular C-O phenol and intramolecular C-C phenol-couples were found to be highly regio- and/or stereoselective catalysts. The first intermolecular C-O phenol-coupling enzyme identified was the cytochrome P450-dependent oxidase berbamunine synthase (CYP80A1) of bisbenzylisoquinoline alkaloid biosynthesis in Berberis cell cultures (5, 6) (Fig. 1). This enzyme is regiospecific, but will accept either (R)- and (S)-N-methylcoclaurine to form R-R and R-S phenol-coupled products. Absolute regio- and stereospecificity is demonstrated in the formation of the lignan (+)-pinoresinol from two molecules of coniferyl alcohol, a reaction guided by dirigent proteins that can be catalyzed by a range of oxidases or oxidants (7). The aporphine alkaloid intramolecular C-C phenol-couple is catalyzed in Coptis japonica cell cultures by the cytochrome P450-dependent oxidase CYP80G2; this enzyme accepts six tetrahydrobenzylisoquinoline alkaloids as substrate (8).Open in a separate windowFIGURE 1.Selected phenol-coupling reactions of alkaloid biosynthesis. Berbamunine synthase (CYP80A1) catalyzes the C-O intermolecular phenol-coupling reaction of bisbenzyisoquinoline alkaloid biosynthesis. (S)-Corytuberine synthase (CYP80G2) catalyzes formation of the intramolecular C-C phenol-couple in magnoflorine biosynthesis. Salutaridine synthase forms the C-C intramolecular phenol-couple of salutaridine in morphine biosynthesis.Morphine has often been described as the king of alkaloids. Although formal syntheses of this powerful analgesic have been reported, yields are low (Ref. 9 and references therein); attempts in organic chemistry to mimic the biosynthetic formation of the C-C phenol-couple of salutaridine (Fig. 1) have been either unsuccessful, yielding rather isoboldine or pallidine (10), or have resulted in very low yield of salutaridine (11) or in a mixture of isoboldine and salutaridine, with the reaction favoring formation of isoboldine by a factor of ∼5 (12). Along with the five stereocenters present in this molecule, the C-C phenol-couple renders a chemical synthesis of morphine commercially unfeasible. The enzyme catalyzing this reaction in planta was sought unsuccessfully for many years and was discovered finally in the opium poppy Papaver somniferum to be a cytochrome P450-dependent oxidase that stereo- and regiospecifically produces salutaridine by C-C phenol-coupling of (R)-reticuline (Fig. 1) (1, 13). The native enzyme salutaridine synthase was unstable, which precluded protein purification for further characterization.Herein, we describe the identification and functional expression of opium poppy salutaridine synthase, a member of the cytochrome P450 family, in Spodoptera frugiperda Sf9 cells. The recombinant enzyme was sufficiently stable in insect cell culture to be characterized with respect to substrate specificity and steady state kinetic values. Recombinant salutaridine synthase converted (R)-reticuline exclusively to salutaridine and (R)-norreticuline exclusively to norsalutaridine (N-demethylsalutaridine).  相似文献   

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California poppy (Eschscholzia californica Cham.) root cultures produce a variety of benzophenanthridine alkaloids, such as sanguinarine, chelirubine and macarpine, with potent biological activity. Sense and antisense constructs of genes encoding the berberine bridge enzyme (BBE) were introduced into California poppy root cultures. Transgenic roots expressing BBE from opium poppy (Papaver somniferum L.) displayed higher levels of BBE mRNA, protein and enzyme activity, and increased accumulation of benzophenanthridine alkaloids compared to control roots transformed with a -glucuronidase gene. In contrast, roots transformed with an antisense-BBE construct from California poppy had lower levels of BBE mRNA and enzyme activity, and reduced benzophenanthridine alkaloid accumulation, relative to controls. Pathway intermediates were not detected in any transgenic root lines. Suppression of benzophenanthridine alkaloid biosynthesis using antisense-BBE also reduced the growth rate of the root cultures. Two-dimensional 1H-NMR spectroscopy showed no difference in the abundance of carbohydrate metabolites in the various transgenic roots lines. However, transformed roots with low levels of benzophenanthridine alkaloids contained larger cellular pools of certain amino acids compared to controls. In contrast, cellular pools of several amino acids were reduced in transgenic roots with elevated benzophenanthridine alkaloid levels relative to controls. The relative abundance of tyrosine, from which benzophenanthridine alkaloids are derived, was only marginally altered in all transgenic root lines; thus, altering metabolic flux through benzophenanthridine alkaloid pathways can affect cellular pools of specific amino acids. Consideration of such interactions is important for the design of metabolic engineering strategies that target benzophenanthridine alkaloid biosynthesis.  相似文献   

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As the sole plant source of many potent alkaloids, opium poppy (Papaver somniferum L.) is an important medicinal crop. Nevertheless, few studies have characterized opium poppy germplasm with crop-specific molecular markers. Because Turkey is a diversity center for opium poppy, Turkish germplasm is a valuable genetic resource for association mapping studies aimed at identifying QTLs controlling morphine content and agronomic traits. In this study, the morphological diversity and molecular diversity of 103 Turkish opium poppy landraces and 15 cultivars were analyzed. Potentially useful morphological variation was observed for morphine content, plant height, and capsule index. However, the landraces exhibited limited breeding potential for stigma number, and seed and straw yields. Both morphological and molecular analyses showed distinct clustering of cultivars and landraces. In addition, a total of 164 SSR and 367 AFLP polymorphic loci were applied to an opium poppy association mapping panel composed of 95 opium poppy landraces which were grown for two seasons. One SSR and three AFLP loci were found to be significantly associated with morphine content (P < 0.01 and LD value (r 2) = 0.10–0.32), and six SSR and 14 AFLP loci were significantly associated with five agronomic traits (plant height, stigma number, capsule index, and seed and straw yields) (P < 0.01 and LD value (r 2) = 0.08–0.35). This is the first report of association mapping in this crop. The identified markers provide initial information for marker-assisted selection of important traits in opium poppy breeding.  相似文献   

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Papaver bracteatum, native to Iran and southern Russia, has been grown successfully in many countries. Research in the northwest United States has confirmed the potential for its commercial production as a source of the alkaloid thebaine. Potential for the chemical conversion of thebaine into codeine, one of man’s most widely used alkaloidal medicinal agents, is reviewed. Economic and social advantages of growing this species over opium poppy (Papaver somniferum) are discussed. The value of the seed oil for cooking and industrial use is considered.  相似文献   

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Iranian (Papaver bracteatum Lindl.) and opium poppy (P. somniferum L.) plantlets obtained from germinated seeds grown on a Murashige and Skoog basal medium (BM) readily manifest alkaloids. Temperature had a profound effect on growth and alkaloid production after 8 weeks in culture. Plantlets of poppy cultivars (cvs.) grew best at 18.5 and 20°C compared to 15 or 25°C. An alkaloid survey study with 24 Iranian and 21 opium poppy cvs. revealed that total morphinan alkaloids ranged from 0 to 6.55 mg/g dw. Prolific axillary branching was achieved from poppy cvs. by maintaining shoots on BM containing 1.0 mg/L N6‐benzyladenine and 0.01 mg/L α‐naphthalene acetic acid for an additional 16 weeks. The influence of vessel size on the growth response of established shoot clumps was determined by subculture in a variety of culture vessels for 8 weeks. The tested culture vessels included culture tubes (55 mm3 capacity (cap.)), babyfood jars (143 mm3 cap.), Magenta GA‐7 containers (365 mm3 cap.), and polycarbonate jars (1890 mm3 cap.) employing an in vitro hydroponics system (i.e. an automated plant culture system (APCS)). Highest growth rates occurred employing the APCS. The culture vessel capacity had a significant positive correlation on shoot length, fresh weight, number of leaves, and number of shoots. Shoot length, fresh weight, leaves, and shoots grown in the APCS exhibited increases of 1‐, 21.5‐, 7.8‐, and 8.3‐fold, respectively, compared to shoots grown in culture tubes. Higher culture growth rates that occurred in the larger‐size vessels were correlated with lower alkaloid production (mg alkaloids/g dw). However, the overall total alkaloids/vessel [(mg alkaloid/g dw)×g culture dw] increased because of greater biomass production per vessel. The alkaloid content was found to remain stable for shoots grown over a 6–month evaluation period.  相似文献   

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