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1.
By applying a mutagenesis/selection procedure to obtain resistance to a lysine analog, S-(2-aminoethyl)l -cysteine (AEC), a lysine overproducing mutant in Nicotiana sylvestris was isolated. Amino acid analyses performed throughout plant development and of different organs of the N. sylvestris RAEC-1 mutant, revealed a developmental-dependent accumulation of free lysine. Lysine biosynthesis in the RAEC-1 mutant was enhanced due to a lysine feedback-desensitized dihydrodipicolinate synthase (DHDPS). Several molecular approaches were undertaken to identify the nucleotide change in the dhdps-r1 gene, the mutated gene coding for the lysine-desensitized enzyme. The enzyme was purified from wild-type plants for amino end microsequencing and 10 amino acids were identified. Using dicotyledon dhdps probes, a genomic fragment was cloned from an enriched library of DNA from the homozygote RAEC-1 mutant plant. A dhdps cDNA, putatively full-length, was isolated from a tobacco cDNA library. Nucleotide sequence analyses confirmed the presence of the previously identified amino end preceded by a chloroplast transit peptide sequence. Nucleotide sequence comparisons, enzymatic and immunological analyses revealed that the tobacco cDNA corresponds to a normal type of DHDPS, lysine feedback-regulated, and the genomic fragment to the mutated DHDPS, insensitive to lysine inhibition. Functional complementation of a DHDPS-deficient Escherichia coli strain was used as an expression system. Reconstruction between the cDNA and genomic fragment led to the production of a cDNA producing an insensitive form of DHDPS. Amino acid sequence comparisons pointed out, at position 104 from the first amino acid of the mature protein, the substitution of Asn to lleu which corresponds to a dinucleotide mutation. This change is unique to the dhdps-r1 gene when compared with the wild-type sequence. The identification of the nucleotide and amino acid change of the lysine-desensitized DHDPS from RAEC-1 plant opens new perspectives for the improvement of the nutritional value of crops and possibly to develop a new plant selectable marker.  相似文献   

2.
3.
In plants, the lysine biosynthetic pathway is an attractive target for both the development of herbicides and increasing the nutritional value of crops given that lysine is a limiting amino acid in cereals. Dihydrodipicolinate synthase (DHDPS) and dihydrodipicolinate reductase (DHDPR) catalyse the first two committed steps of lysine biosynthesis. Here, we carry out for the first time a comprehensive characterisation of the structure and activity of both DHDPS and DHDPR from Arabidopsis thaliana. The A. thaliana DHDPS enzyme (At-DHDPS2) has similar activity to the bacterial form of the enzyme, but is more strongly allosterically inhibited by (S)-lysine. Structural studies of At-DHDPS2 show (S)-lysine bound at a cleft between two monomers, highlighting the allosteric site; however, unlike previous studies, binding is not accompanied by conformational changes, suggesting that binding may cause changes in protein dynamics rather than large conformation changes. DHDPR from A. thaliana (At-DHDPR2) has similar specificity for both NADH and NADPH during catalysis, and has tighter binding of substrate than has previously been reported. While all known bacterial DHDPR enzymes have a tetrameric structure, analytical ultracentrifugation, and scattering data unequivocally show that At-DHDPR2 exists as a dimer in solution. The exact arrangement of the dimeric protein is as yet unknown, but ab initio modelling of x-ray scattering data is consistent with an elongated structure in solution, which does not correspond to any of the possible dimeric pairings observed in the X-ray crystal structure of DHDPR from other organisms. This increased knowledge of the structure and function of plant lysine biosynthetic enzymes will aid future work aimed at improving primary production.  相似文献   

4.
Dihydrodipicolinate synthase (DHDPS) is critical to the production of lysine through the diaminopimelate (DAP) pathway. Elucidation of the function, regulation and structure of this key class I aldolase has been the focus of considerable study in recent years, given that the dapA gene encoding DHDPS has been found to be essential to bacteria and plants. Allosteric inhibition by lysine is observed for DHDPS from plants and some bacterial species, the latter requiring a histidine or glutamate at position 56 (Escherichia coli numbering) over a basic amino acid. Structurally, two DHDPS monomers form the active site, which binds pyruvate and (S)-aspartate β-semialdehyde, with most dimers further dimerising to form a tetrameric arrangement around a solvent-filled centre cavity. The architecture and behaviour of these dimer-of-dimers is explored in detail, including biophysical studies utilising analytical ultracentrifugation, small-angle X-ray scattering and macromolecular crystallography that show bacterial DHDPS tetramers adopt a head-to-head quaternary structure, compared to the back-to-back arrangement observed for plant DHDPS enzymes. Finally, the potential role of pyruvate in providing substrate-mediated stabilisation of DHDPS is considered.  相似文献   

5.
Dihydrodipicolinate synthase (DHDPS) catalyzes the rate limiting step in lysine biosynthesis in bacteria and plants. The structure of DHDPS has been determined from several bacterial species and shown in most cases to form a homotetramer or dimer of dimers. However, only one plant DHDPS structure has been determined to date from the wild tobacco species, Nicotiana sylvestris (Blickling et al. (1997) J. Mol. Biol. 274, 608-621). Whilst N. sylvestris DHDPS also forms a homotetramer, the plant enzyme adopts a 'back-to-back' dimer of dimers compared to the 'head-to-head' architecture observed for bacterial DHDPS tetramers. This raises the question of whether the alternative quaternary architecture observed for N. sylvestris DHDPS is common to all plant DHDPS enzymes. Here, we describe the structure of DHDPS from the grapevine plant, Vitis vinifera, and show using analytical ultracentrifugation, small-angle X-ray scattering and X-ray crystallography that V. vinifera DHDPS forms a 'back-to-back' homotetramer, consistent with N. sylvestris DHDPS. This study is the first to demonstrate using both crystal and solution state measurements that DHDPS from the grapevine plant adopts an alternative tetrameric architecture to the bacterial form, which is important for optimizing protein dynamics as suggested by molecular dynamics simulations reported in this study.  相似文献   

6.
In plants, the rate-limiting step in the pathway for lysine synthesis is catalyzed by the enzyme dihydrodipicolinate synthase (DS), which is encoded by the DapA gene. We previously cloned the soybean (Glycine max cv. Century) DapA gene in Escherichia coli to express functional soybean DS protein. Like the wild-type soybean DS enzyme, the DS activity encoded by the cloned gene was extremely sensitive to feedback inhibition by micromolar concentrations of lysine. Three mutants of the soybean DapA gene were constructed using PCR: one with a single amino acid substitution at codon 104, another with a single amino acid substitution at codon 112, and a mutant containing both modifications. When expressed in E. coli, the mutant DS activities were insensitive to lysine at concentrations up to 1 mM.  相似文献   

7.
Dihydrodipicolinate synthase (DHDPS, EC 4.2.1.52) catalyses the branchpoint reaction of lysine biosynthesis in plants and microbes: the condensation of (S)-aspartate-beta-semialdehyde and pyruvate. The crystal structure of wild-type DHDPS has been published to 2.5A, revealing a tetrameric molecule comprised of four identical (beta/alpha)(8)-barrels, each containing one active site. Previous workers have hypothesised that the catalytic mechanism of the enzyme involves a catalytic triad of amino acid residues, Tyr133, Thr44 and Tyr107, which provide a proton shuttle to transport protons from the active site to solvent. We have tested this hypothesis using site-directed mutagenesis to produce three mutant enzymes: DHDPS-Y133F, DHDPS-T44V and DHDPS-Y107F. Each of these mutants has substantially reduced activity, consistent with the catalytic triad hypothesis. We have determined each mutant crystal structure to at least 2.35A resolution and compared the structures to the wild-type enzyme. All mutant enzymes crystallised in the same space group as the wild-type form and only minor differences in structure are observed. These results suggest that the catalytic triad is indeed in operation in wild-type DHDPS.  相似文献   

8.
Dihydropicolinate synthase (DHDPS; E.C. 4.2.1.52) catalyses the first committed step of lysine biosynthesis in plants and bacteria. Plant DHDPS enzymes, which are responsible solely for lysine biosynthesis, are strongly inhibited by lysine (I0.5 =10 microM), whereas the bacterial enzymes which are less responsive or insensitive to lysine inhibition have the additional function of meso-diaminopimelate biosynthesis which is required for cell wall formation. Previous studies have suggested that expression of the Escherichia coli dapA gene, encoding DHDPS, is unregulated. We show here that this is not the case and that expression of LacZ from the dapA promoter (PdapA) increases in response to diaminopimelic acid limitation in E. coli K-12.  相似文献   

9.
Dihydrodipicolinate synthase (DHDPS) catalyzes the first committed step of the lysine biosynthetic pathway. The tetrameric structure of DHDPS is thought to be essential for enzymatic activity, as isolated dimeric mutants of Escherichia coli DHDPS possess less than 2.5% that of the activity of the wild-type tetramer. It has recently been proposed that the dimeric form lacks activity due to increased dynamics. Tetramerization, by buttressing two dimers together, reduces dynamics in the dimeric unit and explains why all active bacterial DHDPS enzymes to date have been shown to be homo-tetrameric. However, in this study we demonstrate for the first time that DHDPS from methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA) exists in a monomer-dimer equilibrium in solution. Fluorescence-detected analytical ultracentrifugation was employed to show that the dimerization dissociation constant of MRSA-DHDPS is 33 nm in the absence of substrates and 29 nm in the presence of (S)-aspartate semialdehyde (ASA), but is 20-fold tighter in the presence of the substrate pyruvate (1.6 nm). The MRSA-DHDPS dimer exhibits a ping-pong kinetic mechanism (k(cat)=70+/-2 s(-1), K(m)(Pyruvate)=0.11+/-0.01 mm, and K(m)(ASA)=0.22+/-0.02 mm) and shows ASA substrate inhibition with a K(si)(ASA) of 2.7+/-0.9 mm. We also demonstrate that unlike the E. coli tetramer, the MRSA-DHDPS dimer is insensitive to lysine inhibition. The near atomic resolution (1.45 A) crystal structure confirms the dimeric quaternary structure and reveals that the dimerization interface of the MRSA enzyme is more extensive in buried surface area and noncovalent contacts than the equivalent interface in tetrameric DHDPS enzymes from other bacterial species. These data provide a detailed mechanistic insight into DHDPS catalysis and the evolution of quaternary structure of this important bacterial enzyme.  相似文献   

10.
Lysine is one of the most limiting amino acids in plants and its biosynthesis is carefully regulated through inhibition of the first committed step in the pathway catalyzed by dihydrodipicolinate synthase (DHDPS). This is mediated via a feedback mechanism involving the binding of lysine to the allosteric cleft of DHDPS. However, the precise allosteric mechanism is yet to be defined. We present a thorough enzyme kinetic and thermodynamic analysis of lysine inhibition of DHDPS from the common grapevine, Vitis vinifera (Vv). Our studies demonstrate that lysine binding is both tight (relative to bacterial DHDPS orthologs) and cooperative. The crystal structure of the enzyme bound to lysine (2.4 Å) identifies the allosteric binding site and clearly shows a conformational change of several residues within the allosteric and active sites. Molecular dynamics simulations comparing the lysine-bound (PDB ID 4HNN) and lysine free (PDB ID 3TUU) structures show that Tyr132, a key catalytic site residue, undergoes significant rotational motion upon lysine binding. This suggests proton relay through the catalytic triad is attenuated in the presence of lysine. Our study reveals for the first time the structural mechanism for allosteric inhibition of DHDPS from the common grapevine.  相似文献   

11.
The nutritional quality of crop plants is determined by their content in essential amino acids provided in food for humans or in feed for monogastric animals. Amino acid composition of crop–based diets can be improved via manipulation of the properties of key enzymes of amino acid biosynthetic pathways by mutation and transformation. We focused on the aspartate-derived amino acid pathway producing four essential amino acids: lysine, threonine, isoleucine and methionine. Genes encoding aspartate kinase (AK) and dihydrodipicolinate synthase (DHDPS) that operate as key genes of the aspartate pathway have been cloned from Arabidopsis. Genetic and molecular studies revealed that at least five different ak genes are represented. Some of them were characterized in terms of gene and promoter structure, developmental expression and regulatory properties. In the case of dhdps, two quite identical genes have been identified and characterized at expression level. Mutated genes encoding a fully feedback-insensitive form of the DHDPS enzyme were obtained from Nicotiana sylvestris and Arabidopsis. Several chimeric constructs harbouring this mutated allele under the control of constitutive or seed-specific promoters were transferred via Agrobacterium or biolistics in various plant species. In all cases, lines with significant increase of free lysine content were obtained in vegetative organs, but the impact of the transgene in seeds is limited due to the presence of an active catabolic enzyme, lysine ketoreductase. These results show that, although dealing with a complex, highly regulated pathway, the overexpression of a single gene encoding a feedback-insensitive form of the key enzyme DHDPS exerts a significant effect on the carbon flux through the aspartate pathway towards lysine production.  相似文献   

12.

Camelina sativa (camelina) is emerging as an alternative oilseed crop due to its short growing cycle, low input requirements, adaptability to less favorable growing environments and a seed oil profile suitable for biofuel and industrial applications. Camelina meal and oil are also registered for use in animal and fish feeds; however, like meals derived from most cereals and oilseeds, it is deficient in certain essential amino acids, such as lysine. In higher plants, the reaction catalyzed by dihydrodipicolinate synthase (DHDPS) is the first committed step in the biosynthesis of lysine and is subject to regulation by lysine through feedback inhibition. Here, we report enhancement of lysine content in C. sativa seed via expression of a feedback inhibition-insensitive form of DHDPS from Corynebacterium glutamicums (CgDHDPS). Two genes encoding C. sativa DHDPS were identified and the endogenous enzyme is partially insensitive to lysine inhibition. Site-directed mutagenesis was used to examine the impact of alterations, alone and in combination, present in lysine-desensitized DHDPS isoforms from Arabidopsis thaliana DHDPS (W53R), Nicotiana tabacum (N80I) and Zea mays (E84K) on C. sativa DHDPS lysine sensitivity. When introduced alone, each of the alterations decreased sensitivity to lysine; however, enzyme specific activity was also affected. There was evidence of molecular or structural interplay between residues within the C. sativa DHDPS allosteric site as coupling of the W53R mutation with the N80V mutation decreased lysine sensitivity of the latter, but not to the level with the W53R mutation alone. Furthermore, the activity and lysine sensitivity of the triple mutant (W53R/N80V/E84T) was similar to the W53R mutation alone or the C. glutamicum DHDPS. The most active and most lysine-insensitive C. sativa DHDPS variant (W53R) was not inhibited by free lysine up to 1 mM, comparable to the C. glutamicums enzyme. Seed lysine content increased 13.6 -22.6% in CgDHDPS transgenic lines and 7.6–13.2% in the mCsDHDPS lines. The high lysine-accumulating lines from this work may be used to produce superior quality animal feed with improved essential amino acid profile.

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13.
In higher plants the essential amino acids lysine, threonine, methionine and isoleucine are synthesised through a branched pathway starting from aspartate. The key enzyme of lysine biosynthesis in this pathway—dihydrodipicolinate synthase (DHDPS)—is feedback-inhibited by lysine. The dhdps-r1 gene from a mutant Nicotiana sylvestris, which encodes a DHDPS enzyme insensitive to feedback inhibition, was used to improve the lysine content in pigeonpea seeds. The dhdps-r1 coding region driven by a phaseolin or an Arabidopsis 2S2 promoter was successfully overexpressed in the seeds of pigeonpea by using Agrobacterium transformation and particle bombardment. In 11 lines analysed, a 2- to 6-fold enhanced DHDPS activity in immature seeds at a late stage of maturation was found in comparison to wild type. The overexpression of dhdps-r1 led to an enhanced content of free lysine in the seeds of pigeonpea from 1.6 to 8.5 times compared with wild type. However, this was not reflected in an increase in total seed lysine content. This might be explained by a temporal discrepancy between maximal expression of dhdps-r1 and the rate of amino acid incorporation into storage proteins. Assays of the lysine degradative enzyme lysine-ketoglutarate reductase in these seeds showed no co-ordinated regulation of lysine biosynthesis and catabolism during seed maturation. All transgenic plants were fertile and produced morphologically normal seeds.  相似文献   

14.
MosA is a gene product encoded on a pSym megaplasmid of Sinorhizobium meliloti L5-30. The gene is part of an operon reported to be essential for the synthesis of the rhizopine 3-O-methyl-scyllo-inosamine. MosA has been assigned the function of an O-methyltransferase. However, the reported sequence of this protein is very much like that of dihydrodipicolinate synthase (DHDPS), except for a 40 amino acid residue C-terminal domain. This similarity contradicts accepted ideas regarding structure-function relationships of enzymes. We have cloned and overexpressed the recombinant gene in Escherichia coli, and discovered that the reported sequence contains an error resulting in a frame-shift. The correct sequence contains a new stop codon, truncating the C-terminal 41 amino acid residues of the reported sequence. The expressed protein, bearing an N-terminal polyhistidine tag, catalyzes the condensation of pyruvate and aspartate beta-semialdehyde efficiently, suggesting that this activity is not a side-reaction, but an activity for which this enzyme has evolved. Electro-spray mass spectrometry experiments and inhibition by L-lysine are consistent with the enzyme being a DHDPS. E.coli AT997, a mutant host normally requiring exogenous diaminopimelate for growth, could be complemented by transformation with a plasmid bearing the gene encoding MosA. A role for this enzyme in rhizopine synthesis cannot be ruled out, but is called into question.  相似文献   

15.
DHDPS (dihydrodipicolinate synthase) catalyses the branch point in lysine biosynthesis in bacteria and plants and is feedback inhibited by lysine. DHDPS from the thermophilic bacterium Thermotoga maritima shows a high level of heat and chemical stability. When incubated at 90 degrees C or in 8 M urea, the enzyme showed little or no loss of activity, unlike the Escherichia coli enzyme. The active site is very similar to that of the E. coli enzyme, and at mesophilic temperatures the two enzymes have similar kinetic constants. Like other forms of the enzyme, T. maritima DHDPS is a tetramer in solution, with a sedimentation coefficient of 7.2 S and molar mass of 133 kDa. However, the residues involved in the interface between different subunits in the tetramer differ from those of E. coli and include two cysteine residues poised to form a disulfide bond. Thus the increased heat and chemical stability of the T. maritima DHDPS enzyme is, at least in part, explained by an increased number of inter-subunit contacts. Unlike the plant or E. coli enzyme, the thermophilic DHDPS enzyme is not inhibited by (S)-lysine, suggesting that feedback control of the lysine biosynthetic pathway evolved later in the bacterial lineage.  相似文献   

16.
The fab1 mutant of Arabidopsis is partially deficient in activity of beta-ketoacyl-[acyl carrier protein] synthase II (KAS II). This defect results in increased levels of 16:0 fatty acid and is associated with damage and death of the mutants at low temperature. Transformation of fab1 plants with a cDNA from Brassica napus encoding a KAS II enzyme resulted in complementation of both mutant phenotypes. The dual complementation by expression of the single gene proves that low-temperature damage is a consequence of altered membrane unsaturation. The fab1 mutation is a single nucleotide change in Arabidopsis KAS2 that results in a Leu337Phe substitution. The Leu337 residue is conserved among plant and bacterial KAS proteins, and in the crystal structures of E. coli KAS I and KAS II, this leucine abuts a phenylalanine whose imidazole ring extends into the substrate binding cavity causing the fatty acid chain to bend. For functional analysis the equivalent Leu207Phe mutation was introduced into the fabB gene encoding the E. coli KAS I enzyme. Compared to wild-type, the Leu207Phe protein showed a 10-fold decrease in binding affinity for the fatty acid substrate, exhibited a modified behavior during size-exclusion chromatography and was severely impaired in condensation activity. These results suggest that the molecular defect in fab1 plants is a structural instability of the KAS2 gene product induced by insufficient space for the imidazole ring of the mutant phenylalanine residue.  相似文献   

17.
Molecular cloning of wheat dihydrodipicolinate synthase   总被引:7,自引:0,他引:7  
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18.
Dihydrodipicolinate synthase (DHDPS, E.C. 4.2.1.52) is a tetrameric enzyme that catalyses the first committed step of the lysine biosynthetic pathway. Dimeric variants of DHDPS have impaired catalytic activity due to aberrant protein motions within the dimer unit. Thus, it is thought that the tetrameric structure functions to restrict these motions and optimise enzyme dynamics for catalysis. Despite the importance of dimer-dimer association, the interface between subunits of each dimer is small, accounting for only 4.3% of the total monomer surface area, and the structure of the interface is not conserved across species. We have probed the tolerance of dimer-dimer association to mutation by introducing amino acid substitutions within the interface. All point mutations resulted in destabilisation of the ‘dimer of dimers’ tetrameric structure. Both the position of the mutation in the interface and the physico-chemical nature of the substitution appeared to effect tetramerisation. Despite only weak destabilisation of the tetramer by some mutations, catalytic activity was reduced to ∼10-15% of the wild-type in all cases, suggesting that the dimer-dimer interface is finely tuned to optimise function.  相似文献   

19.
A novel Arabidopsis DHDPS gene named DHDPS2 was found through identification of a mutant by promoter trapping. The mutation promotes a reduction of growth resulting from combination of a defect in lysine biosynthesis and accumulation of a toxic level of threonine or derived products. The mutant also modifies the amino acid composition issuing from the pyruvate and aspartate pathways, affecting mainly the root compartment. These data are in accordance with the expression of DHDPS2 in the root apex as visualized by expression of the GUS reporter gene. This suggests that a large proportion of the amino acids derived from pyruvate and aspartate are synthesized in this organ.  相似文献   

20.
Aspartate kinase (AK, EC 2.7.2.4), homoserine dehydrogenase (HSDH, EC 1.1.1.3) and dihydrodipicolinate synthase (DHDPS, EC 4.2.1.52) were isolated and partially purified from immature Chenopodium quinoa Willd seeds. Enzyme activities were studied in the presence of the aspartate-derived amino acids lysine, threonine and methionine and also the lysine analogue S-2-aminoethyl-l-cysteine (AEC), at 1 mM and 5 mM. The results confirmed the existence of, at least, two AK isoenzymes, one inhibited by lysine and the other inhibited by threonine, the latter being predominant in quinoa seeds. HSDH activity was also shown to be partially inhibited by threonine, whereas some of the activity was resistant to the inhibitory effect, indicating the presence of two isoenzymes, one resistant and another sensitive to threonine inhibition. Only one DHDPS isoenzyme highly sensitive to lysine inhibition was detected. The results suggest that the high concentration of lysine observed in quinoa seeds is possibly due to a combined effect of increased lysine synthesis and accumulation in the soluble form and/or as protein lysine. Nitrogen assimilation was also investigated and based on nitrate content, nitrate reductase activity, amino acid distribution and ureide content, the leaves were identified as the predominant site of nitrate reduction in this plant species. The amino acid profile analysis in leaves and roots also indicated an important role of soluble glutamine as a nitrogen transporting compound.  相似文献   

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