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1.
2.
Accumulation of the non-reducing disaccharide trehalose is associated with desiccation tolerance during anhydrobiosis in a number of invertebrates, but there is little information on trehalose biosynthetic genes in these organisms. We have identified two trehalose-6-phosphate synthase (tps) genes in the anhydrobiotic nematode Aphelenchus avenae and determined full length cDNA sequences for both; for comparison, full length tps cDNAs from the model nematode, Caenorhabditis elegans, have also been obtained. The A. avenae genes encode very similar proteins containing the catalytic domain characteristic of the GT-20 family of glycosyltransferases and are most similar to tps-2 of C. elegans; no evidence was found for a gene in A. avenae corresponding to Ce-tps-1. Analysis of A. avenae tps cDNAs revealed several features of interest, including alternative trans-splicing of spliced leader sequences in Aav-tps-1, and four different, novel SL1-related trans-spliced leaders, which were different to the canonical SL1 sequence found in all other nematodes studied. The latter observation suggests that A. avenae does not comply with the strict evolutionary conservation of SL1 sequences observed in other species. Unusual features were also noted in predicted nematode TPS proteins, which distinguish them from homologues in other higher eukaryotes (plants and insects) and in micro-organisms. Phylogenetic analysis confirmed their membership of the GT-20 glycosyltransferase family, but indicated an accelerated rate of molecular evolution. Furthermore, nematode TPS proteins possess N- and C-terminal domains, which are unrelated to those of other eukaryotes: nematode C-terminal domains, for example, do not contain trehalose-6-phosphate phosphatase-like sequences, as seen in plant and insect homologues. During onset of anhydrobiosis, both tps genes in A. avenae are upregulated, but exposure to cold or increased osmolarity also results in gene induction, although to a lesser extent. Trehalose seems likely therefore to play a role in a number of stress responses in nematodes.  相似文献   

3.
Abstract A temperature-sensitive mutant of Saccharomyces cerevisiae has been isolated which accumulates a large pool of trehalose-6-phosphate when shifted to temperatures above 34°C nonpermissive for growth. This indicates that its defect is in the second enzyme of trehalose biosynthesis, the hydrolase that converts trehalose-6-phosphate to trehalose. Trehalose is made continouosly when yeast is growing on high glucose or when it is starved for a nitrogen source, and accumulates as cells enter the stationary phase. Revertants of the mutant able to grow at 37°C arise spontaneously and no longer accumulate trehalose-6-phosphate at this temperature. Also the kinetics of trehalose-6-phosphate accumulation in the mutant following a 25–37°C shift resemble the kinetics of inhibition of RNA and protein synthesis. It is probable therefore that accumulation of high levels of this metabolic intermediate is inhibitory to growth.  相似文献   

4.
Trehalose is a non-reducing disaccharide that is present in diverse organisms ranging from bacteria and fungi to invertebrates, in which it serves as an energy source, osmolyte or protein/membrane protectant. The occurrence of trehalose and trehalose biosynthesis pathway in plants has been discovered recently. Multiple studies have revealed regulatory roles of trehalose-6-phosphate, a precursor of trehalose, in sugar metabolism, growth and development in plants. Trehalose levels are generally quite low in plants but may alter in response to environmental stresses. Transgenic plants overexpressing microbial trehalose biosynthesis genes have been shown to contain increased levels of trehalose and display drought, salt and cold tolerance. In.silico expression profiling of all Arabidopsis trehalose-6-phosphate synthases (TPSs) and trehalose-6-phosphate phosphatases (TPPs) revealed that certain classes of TPS and TPP genes are differentially regulated in response to a variety of abiotic stresses. These studies point to the importance of trehalose biosynthesis in stress responses.  相似文献   

5.
6.
Trehalose is a non-reducing disaccharide that is present in diverse organisms ranging from bacteria and fungi to invertebrates, in which it serves as an energy source, osmolyte or protein/membrane protectant. The occurrence of trehalose and trehalose biosynthesis pathway in plants has been discovered recently. Multiple studies have revealed regulatory roles of trehalose-6-phosphate, a precursor of trehalose, in sugar metabolism, growth and development in plants. Trehalose levels are generally quite low in plants but may alter in response to environmental stresses. Transgenic plants overexpressing microbial trehalose biosynthesis genes have been shown to contain increased levels of trehalose and display drought, salt and cold tolerance. In.silico expression profiling of all Arabidopsis trehalose-6-phosphate synthases (TPSs) and trehalose-6-phosphate phosphatases (TPPs) revealed that certain classes of TPS and TPP genes are differentially regulated in response to a variety of abiotic stresses. These studies point to the importance of trehalose biosynthesis in stress responses.  相似文献   

7.
Trehalose metabolism: a regulatory role for trehalose-6-phosphate?   总被引:14,自引:0,他引:14  
Trehalose is a disaccharide that was initially thought to be rare in plants but now appears to be ubiquitous. A recent study has established that the initial step in trehalose synthesis is essential in Arabidopsis. Evidence is emerging that the precursor of trehalose (trehalose-6-phosphate) is an important regulatory molecule. In yeast, trehalose-6-phosphate regulates sugar influx into glycolysis. In plants, trehalose-6-phosphate also appears to regulate sugar metabolism, but the underlying mechanism is unresolved and may be substantially different from that in yeast.  相似文献   

8.
Shima S  Matsui H  Tahara S  Imai R 《The FEBS journal》2007,274(5):1192-1201
Substantial levels of trehalose accumulate in bacteria, fungi, and invertebrates, where it serves as a storage carbohydrate or as a protectant against environmental stresses. In higher plants, trehalose is detected at fairly low levels; therefore, a regulatory or signaling function has been proposed for this molecule. In many organisms, trehalose-6-phosphate phosphatase is the enzyme governing the final step of trehalose biosynthesis. Here we report that OsTPP1 and OsTPP2 are the two major trehalose-6-phosphate phosphatase genes expressed in vegetative tissues of rice. Similar to results obtained from our previous OsTPP1 study, complementation analysis of a yeast trehalose-6-phosphate phosphatase mutant and activity measurement of the recombinant protein demonstrated that OsTPP2 encodes a functional trehalose-6-phosphate phosphatase enzyme. OsTPP2 expression is transiently induced in response to chilling and other abiotic stresses. Enzymatic characterization of recombinant OsTPP1 and OsTPP2 revealed stringent substrate specificity for trehalose 6-phosphate and about 10 times lower K(m) values for trehalose 6-phosphate as compared with trehalose-6-phosphate phosphatase enzymes from microorganisms. OsTPP1 and OsTPP2 also clearly contrasted with microbial enzymes, in that they are generally unstable, almost completely losing activity when subjected to heat treatment at 50 degrees C for 4 min. These characteristics of rice trehalose-6-phosphate phosphatase enzymes are consistent with very low cellular substrate concentration and tightly regulated gene expression. These data also support a plant-specific function of trehalose biosynthesis in response to environmental stresses.  相似文献   

9.
The function of trehalose biosynthesis in plants   总被引:20,自引:0,他引:20  
Wingler A 《Phytochemistry》2002,60(5):437-440
Trehalose (alpha-D-glucopyranosyl-1,1-alpha-D-glucopyranoside) occurs in a large variety of organisms, ranging from bacteria to invertebrate animals, where it serves as an energy source or stress protectant. Until recently, only few plant species, mainly desiccation-tolerant 'resurrection' plants, were considered to synthesise trehalose. Instead of trehalose, most other plants species accumulate sucrose as major transport sugar and during stress. The ability to synthesize sucrose has probably evolved from the cyanobacterial ancestors of plastids and may be linked to photosynthetic function. Although most plant species do not appear to accumulate easily detectable amounts of trehalose, the discovery of genes for trehalose biosynthesis in Arabidopsis and in a range of crop plants suggests that the ability to synthesise trehalose is widely distributed in the plant kingdom. The apparent lack of trehalose accumulation in these plants is probably due to the presence of trehalase activity. After inhibition of trehalase, trehalose synthesis can be detected in Arabidopsis. Since trehalose induces metabolic changes, such as an accumulation of storage carbohydrates, rapid degradation of trehalose may be required to prevent detrimental effects of trehalose on the regulation of plant metabolism. In addition, the precursor of trehalose, trehalose-6-phosphate, is probably involved in the regulation of developmental and metabolic processes in plants.  相似文献   

10.
Metabolism of trehalose, α,d-glucopyranosyl-α,d-glucopyranoside, was studied in nodules of Bradyrhizobium japonicum-Glycine max [L.] Merr. cv Beeson 80 symbiosis. The nodule extract was divided into three fractions: bacteroid soluble protein, bacteroid fragments, and cytosol. The bacteroid soluble protein and cytosol fractions were gel-filtered. The key biosynthetic enzyme, trehalose-6-phosphate synthetase, was consistently found only in the bacteroids. Trehalose-6-phosphate phosphatase activity was present both in the bacteroid soluble protein and cytosol fractions. Trehalase, the most abundant catabolic enzyme was present in all three fractions and showed two pH optima: pH 3.8 and 6.6. Two other degradative enzymes, phosphotrehalase, acting on trehalose-6-phosphate forming glucose and glucose-6-phosphate, and trehalose phosphorylase, forming glucose and β-glucose-1-phosphate, were also detected in the bacteroid soluble protein and cytosol fractions. Trehalase was present in large excess over trehalose-6-phosphate synthetase. Trehalose accumulation in the nodules would appear to be predicated on spatial separation of trehalose and trehalase.  相似文献   

11.
We investigated the mechanisms of osmoadaptation in the order Halobacteriales, with special emphasis on Haladaptatus paucihalophilus, known for its ability to survive in low salinities. H. paucihalophilus genome contained genes for trehalose synthesis (trehalose-6-phosphate synthase/trehalose-6-phosphatase (OtsAB pathway) and trehalose glycosyl-transferring synthase pathway), as well as for glycine betaine uptake (BCCT family of secondary transporters and QAT family of ABC transporters). H. paucihalophilus cells synthesized and accumulated ∼1.97–3.72 μmol per mg protein of trehalose in a defined medium, with its levels decreasing with increasing salinities. When exogenously supplied, glycine betaine accumulated intracellularly with its levels increasing at higher salinities. RT-PCR analysis strongly suggested that H. paucihalophilus utilizes the OtsAB pathway for trehalose synthesis. Out of 83 Halobacteriales genomes publicly available, genes encoding the OtsAB pathway and glycine betaine BCCT family transporters were identified in 38 and 60 genomes, respectively. Trehalose (or its sulfonated derivative) production and glycine betaine uptake, or lack thereof, were experimentally verified in 17 different Halobacteriales species. Phylogenetic analysis suggested that trehalose synthesis is an ancestral trait within the Halobacteriales, with its absence in specific lineages reflecting the occurrence of gene loss events during Halobacteriales evolution. Analysis of multiple culture-independent survey data sets demonstrated the preference of trehalose-producing genera to saline and low salinity habitats, and the dominance of genera lacking trehalose production capabilities in permanently hypersaline habitats. This study demonstrates that, contrary to current assumptions, compatible solutes production and uptake represent a common mechanism of osmoadaptation within the Halobacteriales.  相似文献   

12.
Energy-metabolism oscillation (EMO) in yeast is basically regulated by a feedback-loop of redox reactions and modulated by the metabolism of storage carbohydrates like glycogen and trehalose. We found that EMO of the transformant tps1Delta deleted of TPS1 encoding trehalose-6-phosphate synthase fluctuated unsteadily with a short wavelength in the absence of trehalose synthesis, while EMO was gradually destabilized with the wavelength increasing as storage in a frozen state was prolonged. During EMO, whereas the fluctuations in levels of the oxygen uptake rate, NAD(P)H and cAMP were attenuated, the glycerol level fluctuated with high amplitude and the levels of glycogen and ethanol fluctuated with similar amplitudes to those in the wild type. Thus, EMO barely operated in tps1Delta depending on the increase of glycerol synthesis as a source of inorganic phosphate in place of trehalose synthesis and fairly conserved fluctuation in the level of ethanol as a synchronizing agent.  相似文献   

13.
Trehalose is an important disaccharide and a key regulation factor for the development of many organisms, including plants, bacteria, fungi and insects. In order to study the trehalose synthesis pathway, a cDNA for a trehalose-6-phosphate synthase from Spodoptera exigua (SeTPS) was cloned which contained an open reading frame of 2481 nucleotides encoding a protein of 826 amino acids with a predicted molecular weight of 92.65 kDa. The SeTPS genome has 12 exons and 11 introns. Northern blot and RT-PCR analyses showed that SeTPS mRNA was expressed in the fat body and in the ovary. Competitive RT-PCR revealed that SeTPS mRNA was expressed in the fat body at different developmental stages and was present at a high level in day 1 S. exigua pupae. The concentrations of trehalose and glucose in the hemolymph were determined by HPLC and showed that they varied at different developmental stages and were negatively correlated to each other. The survival rates of the insects injected with dsRNA corresponding to SeTPS gene reached 53.95%, 49.06%, 34.86% and 33.24% for 36, 48, 60 and 204 h post-injection respectively which were significantly lower than those of the insects in three control groups. These findings provide new data on the tissue distribution, expression patterns and potential function of the trehalose-6-phosphate synthase gene.  相似文献   

14.
Trehalose is the primary organic solute in Rubrobacter xylanophilus under all conditions tested, including those for optimal growth. We detected genes of four different pathways for trehalose synthesis in the genome of this organism, namely, the trehalose-6-phosphate synthase (Tps)/trehalose-6-phosphate phosphatase (Tpp), TreS, TreY/TreZ, and TreT pathways. Moreover, R. xylanophilus is the only known member of the phylum Actinobacteria to harbor TreT. The Tps sequence is typically bacterial, but the Tpp sequence is closely related to eukaryotic counterparts. Both the Tps/Tpp and the TreT pathways were active in vivo, while the TreS and the TreY/TreZ pathways were not active under the growth conditions tested and appear not to contribute to the levels of trehalose observed. The genes from the active pathways were functionally expressed in Escherichia coli, and Tps was found to be highly specific for GDP-glucose, a rare feature among these enzymes. The trehalose-6-phosphate formed was specifically dephosphorylated to trehalose by Tpp. The recombinant TreT synthesized trehalose from different nucleoside diphosphate-glucose donors and glucose, but the activity in R. xylanophilus cell extracts was specific for ADP-glucose. The TreT could also catalyze trehalose hydrolysis in the presence of ADP, but with a very high Km. Here, we functionally characterize two systems for the synthesis of trehalose in R. xylanophilus, a representative of an ancient lineage of the actinobacteria, and discuss a possible scenario for the exceptional occurrence of treT in this extremophilic bacterium.  相似文献   

15.
16.
Heat-shock response is highly conserved in animals and microorganisms, and it results in the synthesis of heat-shock proteins. In yeast, heat-shock response has also been reported to induce trehalose accumulation. We explored the relationship between heat- (35 C) or cold-shock (1 and 10 C) and trehalose metabolism in the entomopathogenic nematode, Heterorhabditis bacteriophora. Because both heat- and cold-shocks may precede desiccation stress in natural soil environments, we hypothesized that nematodes may accumulate a general desiccation protectant, trehalose, under both situations. Indeed, both heat- and cold-shocks influenced trehalose accumulation and activities of enzymes of trehalose metabolism in H. bacteriophora. Trehalose increased by 5- and 6-fold in heat- and cold-shocked infective juveniles, respectively, within 3 hr of exposure, compared with the nematodes maintained at 25 C (culture temperature). The activity of trehalose-6-phosphate synthase (T6PS), an enzyme involved in the synthesis of trehalose, also significantly increased in both heat- and cold-shocked nematodes during the first 3 hr of exposure. Generally, the trehalose levels and activities of T6PS declined to their original levels within 3 hr when nematodes were transferred back to 25 C. In both heat- and cold-shocked nematodes, trehalase activity decreased significantly within the first 3 hr and generally returned to the original levels within 3 hr when these nematodes were transferred back to 25 C. The results demonstrate that the trehalose concentrations in H. bacteriophora are influenced by both heat- and cold-shocks and are regulated by the action of 2 trehalose-metabolizing enzymes, T6PS and trehalase. The accumulated trehalose may enhance survival of nematodes under both cold and warm conditions, but it may also provide simultaneous protection against desiccation that may result from subsequent evaporation or freezing. This is the first report of the relationship between trehalose metabolism and heat-shock for the Nematoda.  相似文献   

17.
Trehalose metabolism genes in Caenorhabditis elegans and filarial nematodes   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
The sugar trehalose is claimed to be important in the physiology of nematodes where it may function in sugar transport, energy storage and protection against environmental stresses. In this study we investigated the role of trehalose metabolism in nematodes, using Caenorhabditis elegans as a model, and also identified complementary DNA clones putatively encoding genes involved in trehalose pathways in filarial nematodes. In C. elegans two putative trehalose-6-phosphate synthase (tps) genes encode the enzymes that catalyse trehalose synthesis and five putative trehalase (tre) genes encode enzymes catalysing hydrolysis of the sugar. We showed by RT-PCR or Northern analysis that each of these genes is expressed as mRNA at all stages of the C. elegans life cycle. Database searches and sequencing of expressed sequence tag clones revealed that at least one tps gene and two tre genes are expressed in the filarial nematode Brugia malayi, while one tps gene and at least one tre gene were identified for Onchocerca volvulus. We used the feeding method of RNA interference in C. elegans to knock down temporarily the expression of each of the tps and tre genes. Semiquantitative RT-PCR analysis confirmed that expression of each gene was silenced by RNA interference. We did not observe an obvious phenotype for any of the genes silenced individually but gas-chromatographic analysis showed >90% decline in trehalose levels when both tps genes were targeted simultaneously. This decline in trehalose content did not affect viability or development of the nematodes.  相似文献   

18.
Trehalose is a disaccharide with potential applications in the biotechnology and food industries. We propose a method for industrial production of trehalose, based on improved strains of Corynebacterium glutamicum. This paper describes the heterologous expression of Escherichia coli trehalose-synthesizing enzymes trehalose-6-phosphate synthase (OtsA) and trehalose-6-phosphate phosphatase (OtsB) in C. glutamicum, as well as its impact on the trehalose biosynthetic rate and metabolic-flux distributions, during growth in a defined culture medium. The new recombinant strain showed a five- to sixfold increase in the activity of OtsAB pathway enzymes, compared to a control strain, as well as an almost fourfold increase in the trehalose excretion rate during the exponential growth phase and a twofold increase in the final titer of trehalose. The heterologous expression described resulted in a reduced specific glucose uptake rate and Krebs cycle flux, as well as reduced pentose pathway flux, a consequence of downregulated glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase and 6-phosphogluconate dehydrogenase. The results proved the suitability of using the heterologous expression of Ots proteins in C. glutamicum to increase the trehalose biosynthetic rate and yield and suggest critical points for further improvement of trehalose overproduction in C. glutamicum.  相似文献   

19.
Trehalose transport and metabolism in Escherichia coli.   总被引:23,自引:15,他引:8       下载免费PDF全文
Trehalose metabolism in Escherichia coli is complicated by the fact that cells grown at high osmolarity synthesize internal trehalose as an osmoprotectant, independent of the carbon source, although trehalose can serve as a carbon source at both high and low osmolarity. The elucidation of the pathway of trehalose metabolism was facilitated by the isolation of mutants defective in the genes encoding transport proteins and degradative enzymes. The analysis of the phenotypes of these mutants and of the reactions catalyzed by the enzymes in vitro allowed the formulation of the degradative pathway at low osmolarity. Thus, trehalose utilization begins with phosphotransferase (IITre/IIIGlc)-mediated uptake delivering trehalose-6-phosphate to the cytoplasm. It continues with hydrolysis to trehalose and proceeds by splitting trehalose, releasing one glucose residue with the simultaneous transfer of the other to a polysaccharide acceptor. The enzyme catalyzing this reaction was named amylotrehalase. Amylotrehalase and EIITre were induced by trehalose in the medium but not at high osmolarity. treC and treB encoding these two enzymes mapped at 96.5 min on the E. coli linkage map but were not located in the same operon. Use of a mutation in trehalose-6-phosphate phosphatase allowed demonstration of the phosphoenolpyruvate- and IITre-dependent in vitro phosphorylation of trehalose. The phenotype of this mutant indicated that trehalose-6-phosphate is the effective in vivo inducer of the system.  相似文献   

20.
It is currently thought that most flowering plants lack the capacity to synthesize trehalose, a common disaccharide of bacteria, fungi and invertebrates that appears to play a major role in desiccation tolerance. Attempts have therefore been made to render plants more drought-resistant by the expression of microbial genes for trehalose synthesis. It is demonstrated here that Arabidopsis thaliana itself possesses genes for at least one of the enzymes required for trehalose synthesis, trehalose-6-phosphate phosphatase. The yeast tps2 mutant, which lacks this enzyme, is heat-sensitive, and Arabidopsis cDNA able to complement this effect has been screened for. Half of the yeast transformants that grew at 38.6°C were also able to produce trehalose. All of these expressed one of two Arabidopsis cDNA, either AtTPPA or AtTPPB, which are both homologous to the C-terminal part of the yeast TPS2 gene and other microbial trehalose-6-phosphate phosphatases. Yeast tps2 mutants expressing AtTPPA or AtTPPB contained trehalose-6-phosphate phosphatase activity that could be measured both in vivo and in vitro. The enzyme dephosphorylated trehalose-6-phosphate but not glucose-6-phosphate or sucrose-6-phosphate. Both genes are expressed in flowers and young developing tissue of Arabidopsis. The finding of these novel Arabidopsis genes for trehalose-6-phosphate phosphatase strongly indicates that a pathway for trehalose biosynthesis exists in plants.  相似文献   

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