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1.
ent-Kaurene biosynthesis as a prerequisite for gibberellin (GA) biosynthesis was studied in germinating Hordeum vulgare L., cv Himalaya caryopses and correlated, in time, with the appearance of α-amylase activity. The rate of ent-kaurene biosynthesis was estimated by inhibiting its further metabolism with plant growth retardants (triapenthenol or tetcyclacis) and measuring its accumulation by isotope dilution using combined gas chromatographymass spectrometry. In the inhibitor-treated caryopses, ent-kaurene accumulation began approximately 24 hours after imbibition and proceeded at a rate of about 1 to 2 picomoles per hour per caryopsis, depending on the batch of seeds. In the absence of inhibitor, ent-kaurene did not accumulate, indicating that it is normally turned over rapidly, presumably to further intermediates of the GA biosynthesis pathway and eventually to GAs. ent-Kaurene accumulation occurred almost exclusively in the shoot, which is, therefore, probably the site of biosynthesis. α-Amylase production began between 30 and 36 hours after imbibition and, thus, correlated well with de novo GA biosynthesis, as estimated from ent-kaurene accumulation. However, inhibition of ent-kaurene oxidation by plant growth retardants did not reduce the α-amylase production significantly, although it did reduce shoot elongation. We conclude that ent-kaurene is produced in the shoot and is continuously converted to GA, which is essential for normal shoot elongation, but not for the production of α-amylase in the aleurone layer.  相似文献   

2.
At least five genes of the gibberellin (GA) biosynthesis pathway are clustered on chromosome 4 of Gibberella fujikuroi; these genes encode the bifunctional ent-copalyl diphosphate synthase/ent-kaurene synthase, a GA-specific geranylgeranyl diphosphate synthase, and three cytochrome P450 monooxygenases. We now describe a fourth cytochrome P450 monooxygenase gene (P450-4). Gas chromatography-mass spectrometry analysis of extracts of mycelia and culture fluid of a P450-4 knockout mutant identified ent-kaurene as the only intermediate of the GA pathway. Incubations with radiolabeled precursors showed that the metabolism of ent-kaurene, ent-kaurenol, and ent-kaurenal was blocked in the transformants, whereas ent-kaurenoic acid was metabolized efficiently to GA4. The GA-deficient mutant strain SG139, which lacks the 30-kb GA biosynthesis gene cluster, converted ent-kaurene to ent-kaurenoic acid after transformation with P450-4. The B1-41a mutant, described as blocked between ent-kaurenal and ent-kaurenoic acid, was fully complemented by P450-4. There is a single nucleotide difference between the sequence of the B1-41a and wild-type P450-4 alleles at the 3′ consensus sequence of intron 2 in the mutant, resulting in reduced levels of active protein due to a splicing defect in the mutant. These data suggest that P450-4 encodes a multifunctional ent-kaurene oxidase catalyzing all three oxidation steps between ent-kaurene and ent-kaurenoic acid.  相似文献   

3.

Main conclusion

We report a novel physiological response to blue light in the moss Physcomitrella patens . Blue light regulates ent -kaurene biosynthesis and avoidance response to protonemal growth.

Abstract

Gibberellins (GAs) are a group of diterpene-type plant hormones biosynthesized from ent-kaurenoic acid via ent-kaurene. While the moss Physcomitrella patens has part of the GA biosynthetic pathway, from geranylgeranyl diphosphate to ent-kaurenoic acid, no GA is found in this species. Caulonemal differentiation in a P. patens mutant with a disrupted bifunctional ent-copalyl diphosphate synthase/ent-kaurene synthase (PpCPS/KS) gene is suppressed under red light, and is recovered by application of ent-kaurene and ent-kaurenoic acid. This indicates that derivatives of ent-kaurenoic acid, not GAs, might act as endogenous developmental regulators. Here, we found unique responses in the protonemal growth of P. patens under unilateral blue light, and these regulators were involved in the responses. When protonemata of the wild type were incubated under blue light, the chloronemal filaments grew in the opposite direction to the light source. Although this avoidance was not observed in the ent-kaurene deficient mutant, chloronemal growth toward a blue-light source in the mutant was suppressed by application of ent-kaurenoic acid, and the growth was rescued to that in the wild type. Expression analysis of the PpCPS/KS gene showed that the mRNA level under blue light was rapidly increased and was five times higher than under red light. These results suggest that regulators derived from ent-kaurenoic acid are strongly involved not only in the growth regulation of caulonemal differentiation under red light, but also in the light avoidance response of chloronemal growth under blue light. In particular, growth under blue light is regulated via the PpCPS/KS gene.  相似文献   

4.
Investigations on the sites of ent-kaur-16-ene (ent-kaurene) biosynthesis were conducted with cell-free extracts from several excised parts of 10-, 13-, and 16-d-old tall and dwarf pea (Pisum sativum L.) seedlings. [14C]Mevalonic acid was incorporated into ent-kaurene in cell-free extracts from young developing leaves and elongating internodes of tall (`Alaska') and dwarf (`Progress No.9') pea seedlings at all three stages of development. ent-Kaurene biosynthesis also occurred readily in cell-free extracts from shoot tips, petioles, and stipules near the young elongating internodes. The ent-kaurene-synthesizing activity found in young developing tissues declined as tissues matured. Little or no activity was detectable in enzyme extracts from cotyledons and root tips at different stages. In light grown tall pea internodes ent-kaurene-synthesizing activity was low as they began to elongate, reached a maximum when the internodes reached about 2 cm in length and declined as they matured. Activity in extracts of dwarf shoot tips and internodes was generally lower than in equivalent tall plants, but the activity in dwarf leaves and stipules was somewhat higher than in tall plants. With the exception of root tips, there is a strong correlation between growth potential of a tissue and the rate of ent-kaurene biosynthesis in extracts from that tissue.  相似文献   

5.
The effect of light on the metabolism of [14C]kaurene in light-requiring lettuce seeds (Lactuca sativa L. cv Grand Rapids) was investigated. Seeds were soaked in a solution of [14C]ent-kaurene in methylene chloride with 0.01% Tween-20, dried, and incubated in 20% polyethylene glycol (PEG) to prevent seedling development. Labeled metabolites were extracted and analyzed by high performance liquid chromatography and gas chromatography-radio counting. [14C]ent-Kaurenol and [14C]ent-kaurenal were identified in seeds incubated in constant white light, while no ethyl acetate-soluble metabolites were found in seeds incubated in the dark. In time course experiments using acid scarified seeds, metabolism began after 18 hours of incubation and greatly increased after 24 hours of incubation in 20% PEG. By 48 hours, several unidentified, more polar metabolites were found. Germination was induced in seeds imbibed in 20% PEG by 4 hours of red or 4 hours of white light following 20 hours in the dark, and was fully reversed by 2 hours of far red light. However, in metabolism experiments, [14C]ent-kaurene oxidation was observed only with constant white light. These results indicate that although ent-kaurene oxidation is a light sensitive step in the biosynthesis of gibberellins in Grand Rapids lettuce seeds, ent-kaurene metabolism is not required for light-induced germination.  相似文献   

6.
The nonallelicgib-1 andgib-3 tomato (Lycopersion esculentum Mill.) mutants are gibberellin deficient and exhibit a dwarfed growth habit. Previous work has shown that this dwarfed growth pattern can be reversed by the application of a number of gibberellins and their precursors, includingent-kaurene (ent-kaur-16-ene). This indicates that they are blocked in gibberellin biosynthesis at a step prior toent-kaurene metabolism. The normal accumulation of carotenoids observed in these mutants suggests a functionally normal isoprenoid pathway.Ent-kaurene is synthesized from geranylgeranyl pyrophosphate in a two-step process with copalyl pyrophosphate as an intermediate.In vitro assays using young fruit extracts from wild-type andgib-2 plants resulted in the conversion of geranylgeranyl pyrophosphate to copalyl pyrophosphate, and the conversion of copalyl pyrophosphate toentkaurene. Similar assays usinggib-1 plants indicated a reduced ability for synthesis of copalyl pyrophosphate from geranylgeranyl pyrophosphate, and thus a reducedent-kaurene synthetase A activity. Furthermore,gib-3 extracts demonstrated a reduced ability to synthesizeent-kaurene from copalyl pyrophosphate, and thus a reducedent-kaurene synthetase B activity. These results establish the enzymatic conversion of geranylgeranyl pyrophosphate to copalyl pyrophosphate, and copalyl pyrophosphate toent-kaurene, as the sites of the mutations ingib-1 andgib-3 tomatoes, respectively. We also note that tomato fruit extracts contain components which are inhibitory toent-kaurene synthesis.  相似文献   

7.
The Arabidopsis GA3 cDNA was expressed in yeast (Saccharomyces cerevisiae) and the ability of the transformed yeast cells to metabolize ent-kaurene was tested. We show by full-scan gas chromatography-mass spectrometry that the transformed cells produce ent-kaurenoic acid, and demonstrate that the single enzyme GA3 (ent-kaurene oxidase) catalyzes the three steps of gibberellin biosynthesis from ent-kaurene to ent-kaurenoic acid.  相似文献   

8.
Potential sites of gibberellin biosynthesis in 10-day-old `Alaska' pea (Pisum sativum L.) seedlings were investigated using a cell-free ezyme system capable of incorporating [14C]-mevalonic acid into ent-kaurene. In peas, ent-kaurene is assumed to be a committed intermediate in the gibberellin biosynthetic pathway. Comparative results from enzyme assays using extracts from shoot tips, leaf blades, internodes, and root tips indicate that the highest capacity for ent-kaurene (and presumably gibberellin) synthesis is in those tissues with the greatest potential for growth. The highest rates were obtained with extracts prepared from the fifth (youngest) internode, the fourth (youngest) expanded leaf, and the shoot tip itself. This report represents the first direct evidence that the enzymes responsible for early stages in gibberellin biosynthesis occur in internode tissues with potential for rapid elongation.  相似文献   

9.

Objectives

To characterize the ent-kaurene oxidase (KO) involved in maize (Zea mays) gibberellin (GA) biosynthesis.

Results

Two putative KO genes were identified in maize based on the homologous alignment. Biochemical characterization indicated that one of them encoded a cytochrome P450 monooxygenase (P450) CYP701A26, which reacted with ent-kaurene to form ent-kaurenoic acid, the key intermediate of GA biosynthesis. CYP701A26 showed constitutive expression in active growing tissues and no inducible expression, which led to putative designation of CYP701A26 as the ZmKO. CYP701A26 exhibited substrate promiscuity to catalyze oxidation of other labdane related diterpenes. Another maize KO homologue, CYP701A43 did not show any catalytic activities on ent-kaurene or other tested diterpenes. It exhibited inducible gene expression and might accept unknown substrates to play roles in specialized metabolism for stress response.

Conclusions

CYP701A26 was characterized to exhibit ent-kaurene oxidase activity with substrate promiscuity and might be involved in maize GA biosynthesis, and its homologue CYP701A43 did not show such function and might play roles in stress response.
  相似文献   

10.
Young shoots of normal maize (Zea mays L.) were used to determine both the stepwise metabolism of ent-kaurene to gibberellin A12-aldehyde and the endogenous presence of the members in this series. Each of the five steps in the sequence was established by feeds of 17-13C, 3H-labeled kauranoids to cubes from the cortex of elongating internodes, to homogenates from the cortex of elongating internodes, and/or to homogenates from dark-grown seedlings. The 13C-metabolites were identified by Kovats retention indices (KRI) and full-scan capillary gas chromatography-mass spectrometry (GC-MS). Five substrates and the final product in this sequence were shown to be native by the isotopic dilution of 17-13C, 3H-labeled substrates added as internal standards to extracts obtained from elongating internodes. Evidence for the isotopic dilution was obtained by KRI and full-scan capillary GC-MS. Thus, we document the presence in young maize shoots of the metabolic steps, ent-kaurene → ent-kaurenol → ent-kaurenal → ent-kaurenoic acid → ent-7 α-hydroxykaurenoic acid → gibberellin A12-aldehyde.  相似文献   

11.
The ga2 mutant of Arabidopsis thaliana is a gibberellin-deficient dwarf. Previous biochemical studies have suggested that the ga2 mutant is impaired in the conversion of copalyl diphosphate to ent-kaurene, which is catalyzed by ent-kaurene synthase (KS). Overexpression of the previously isolated KS cDNA from pumpkin (Cucurbita maxima) (CmKS) in the ga2 mutant was able to complement the mutant phenotype. A genomic clone coding for KS, AtKS, was isolated from A. thaliana using CmKS cDNA as a heterologous probe. The corresponding A. thaliana cDNA was isolated and expressed in Escherichia coli as a fusion protein. The fusion protein showed enzymatic activity that converted [3H]copalyl diphosphate to [3H]ent-kaurene. The recombinant AtKS protein derived from the ga2–1 mutant is truncated by 14 kD at the C-terminal end and does not contain significant KS activity in vitro. Sequence analysis revealed that a C-2099 to T base substitution, which converts Gln-678 codon to a stop codon, is present in the AtKS cDNA from the ga2–1 mutant. Taken together, our results show that the GA2 locus encodes KS.  相似文献   

12.
Germinating pea (Pisum sativum L.) seeds of two dwarf cultivars, “Progress No. 9” and “Green Arrow”, and two tall cultivars, “Alaska” and “Alderman”, were treated with low temperature (3–5°C) for 14 days and then transferred to normal growing conditions (19–21°C for 16 h/14.5–16.5°C for 8 h) for an additional 10 days. Biosynthesis of [14C]ent-kaurene from [14C]2-mevalonic acid (2-MVA) was assayed in cell-free enzyme extracts prepared from shoot tips 10 days after cold treatment and was compared with activity in enzyme extracts prepared from noncold-treated, 10-day-old control plants. Shoot lengths of cold-treated plants were measured throughout a 35-day period and compared with shoot lengths of plants grown without cold treatment for 25–35 days. Low temperature induced a five-to 10-fold enhancement ofent-kaurene, hence potentially gibberellin (GA), biosynthesis in seedlings of the two dwarf cultivars but not in the tall cultivars. However, the lack of an increase in growth rate in the cold-treated dwarfs indicated that endogenous GA biosynthesis remained blocked at some point beyondent-kaurene in the biosynthetic pathway. Since the late-flowering “Alderman” cultivar did not exhibit enhanced biosynthesis ofent-kaurene, it appears that if vernalization in late-flowering cultivars of peas is correlated with enhanced GA biosynthesis, it is not the early part of the biosynthetic pathway which is affected.  相似文献   

13.
Barley grains contain hydrocarbons, including a material indistinguishable from ent-kaurene by GLC, and which after appropriate chemical conversions contain material behaving like ent-kauran-16,17-diol, ent-kaurene norketone and ent-17-nor-kaurane on TLC and GLC. The presence of ent-kaurene was confirmed by conversion to ent-kauran-16-ol and, following formation of acetate-[3H], recrystallization to constant specific activity with unlabelled carrier. In the initial ca. 15 hr of germination, preceding the rise in endogenous gibberellins, the level of ent-kaurene falls. Exogenous ent-kaurene-[14C] was not metabolized by intact barley grains. ent-Kauran-16,17-epoxide was formed non-enzymically by boiled extracts. Unboiled homogenates also formed ent-kauran-17-ol and ent-kauran-16,17-diol. The diol appeared to be formed from the epoxide, but the ent-kauran-17-ol was not. No recognized gibberellin precursors were detected. Nevertheless, endogenous ent-kaurene may be the stored biosynthetic precursor of gibberellins in germinating barley grains.  相似文献   

14.
Net synthesis of [14C]ent-kaurene from [14C]2-mevalonic acid was assayed in cell-free enzyme extracts prepared from Alaska pea (Pisum sativum L.) seedlings throughout 44 h of a regimen consisting of a 16-h day and an 8-h night. Activities generally followed an upward trend during the dark period and a downward trend during the photoperiod. Activity was also assayed in enzyme extracts prepared at intervals during a 12-h photoperiod and a following, continuous 36-h dark period after entrainment of plants to a regimen of 12-h days and 12-h nights.Ent-kaurene synthesis activity again followed an upward trend in enzyme extracts prepared during what would have been the entrainment dark period, and a downward trend during the entrainment photoperiod. The apparent endogenous rhythm ofent-kaurene biosynthesis may have implications for the regulation of gibberellin biosynthesis.  相似文献   

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

16.
Chrysanthemum (Chrysanthemum × morifolium) is one of the most important ornamental plants in the world. They are typically used as cut flowers or potted plants. Chrysanthemum can exhibit red, purple, pink, yellow and white flowers, but lack bright red and blue flowers. In this study, we identified two chrysanthemum cultivars, C × morifolium ‘LPi’ and C × morifolium ‘LPu’, that only accumulate flavonoids in their ligulate flowers. Next, we isolated seven anthocyanin biosynthesis genes, namely CmCHS, CmF3H, CmF3’H, CmDFR, CmANS, CmCHI and Cm3GT in these cultivars. RT-PCR and qRT-PCR analyses showed that CmF3′H was the most important enzyme required for cyanidin biosynthsis. To rebuild the delphinidin pathway, we downregulated CmF3H using RNAi and overexpressed the Senecio cruentus F35H (PCFH) gene in chrysanthemum. The resultant chrysanthemum demonstrated a significantly increased content of cyanidin and brighter red flower petals but did not accumulate delphinidin. These results indicated that CmF3H in chrysanthemum is important for anthocyanin accumulation, and Senecio cruentus F3′5′H only exhibited F3′H activity in chrysanthemum but did not rebuild the delphinidin pathway to form blue flower chrysanthemum.  相似文献   

17.
Gibberellins are ent-kaurene-derived diterpenoid phytohormones produced by plants, fungi, and bacteria. The distinct gibberellin biosynthetic pathways in plants and fungi are known, but not that in bacteria. Plants typically use two diterpene synthases to form ent-kaurene, while fungi use only a single bifunctional diterpene synthase. We demonstrate here that Bradyrhizobium japonicum encodes separate ent-copalyl diphosphate and ent-kaurene synthases. These are found in an operon whose enzymatic composition indicates that gibberellin biosynthesis in bacteria represents a third independently assembled pathway relative to plants and fungi. Nevertheless, sequence comparisons also suggest potential homology between diterpene synthases from bacteria, plants, and fungi.  相似文献   

18.
Gibberellins are ent-kaurene derived phytohormones that are involved in seed germination, stem elongation, and flower induction in seed plants, as well as in antheridia formation and spore germination in ferns. Although ubiquitous in vascular plants, the occurrence and potential function(s) of gibberellins in bryophytes have not yet been resolved. To determine the potential role of gibberellin and/or gibberellin-like compounds in mosses, the effect of AMO-1618 on spores of Physcomitrella patens (Hedw.) B.S.G. was tested. AMO-1618, which inhibited ent-kaurene and gibberellin biosynthesis in angiosperms, also inhibited the bifunctional copalyl diphosphate synthase (E.C. 5.5.1.13)/ent-kaurene synthase (E.C. 4.2.3.19) of P. patens. AMO-1618 also caused a decrease in spore germination rates of P. patens, and this inhibitory effect was less pronounced in the presence of ent-kaurene. These results suggest that ent-kaurene biosynthesis is required by P. patens spores to germinate, implying the presence of gibberellin-like phytohormones in mosses.  相似文献   

19.
The plant growth retardant paclobutrazol, (PP333) (2RS, 3RS)-1-(4-chlorophenyl)-4,4-dimethyl-2-(1,2,4-triazol-1-yl)pentan-3-ol, inhibits specifically the three steps in the oxidation of the gibberellin-precursorent-kaurene toent-kaurenoic acid in a cell-free system fromCucurbita maxima endosperm. The KI50 for this inhibition is 2×10–8 M. The KI50 values for the separated2S, 3S, and2R, 3R enantiomers of paclobutrazol in this system are 2×10–8 M and 7×10–7 M, respectively. A cell-free preparation from immatureMalus pumila embryos convertsent-kaurene to gibberellin A9, whereas no conversion occurs in a similar preparation fromMalus endosperm. The conversion ofent-kaurene by the embryo preparation is inhibited by paclobutrazol with KI50 values for the2S,3S and2R,3R enantiomers of 2×10–8 M and 6×10–8 M, respectively.  相似文献   

20.
The biosynthesis of the tetracyclic diterpene ent-kaurene is a critical step in the general (primary) metabolism of gibberellin hormones. ent-Kaurene is formed by a two-step cyclization of geranylgeranyl diphosphate via the intermediate ent-copalyl diphosphate. In a lower land plant, the moss Physcomitrella patens, a single bifunctional diterpene synthase (diTPS) catalyzes both steps. In contrast, in angiosperms, the two consecutive cyclizations are catalyzed by two distinct monofunctional enzymes, ent-copalyl diphosphate synthase (CPS) and ent-kaurene synthase (KS). The enzyme, or enzymes, responsible for ent-kaurene biosynthesis in gymnosperms has been elusive. However, several bifunctional diTPS of specialized (secondary) metabolism have previously been characterized in gymnosperms, and all known diTPSs for resin acid biosynthesis in conifers are bifunctional. To further understand the evolution of ent-kaurene biosynthesis as well as the evolution of general and specialized diterpenoid metabolisms in gymnosperms, we set out to determine whether conifers use a single bifunctional diTPS or two monofunctional diTPSs in the ent-kaurene pathway. Using a combination of expressed sequence tag, full-length cDNA, genomic DNA, and targeted bacterial artificial chromosome sequencing, we identified two candidate CPS and KS genes from white spruce (Picea glauca) and their orthologs in Sitka spruce (Picea sitchensis). Functional characterization of the recombinant enzymes established that ent-kaurene biosynthesis in white spruce is catalyzed by two monofunctional diTPSs, PgCPS and PgKS. Comparative analysis of gene structures and enzyme functions highlights the molecular evolution of these diTPSs as conserved between gymnosperms and angiosperms. In contrast, diTPSs for specialized metabolism have evolved differently in angiosperms and gymnosperms.Conifers (Coniferophyta) are well known for producing an abundant and diverse assortment of oleoresin diterpenoids, predominantly in the form of diterpene resin acids from specialized (or secondary) metabolism, that play roles in conifer defense (Trapp and Croteau, 2001a; Keeling and Bohlmann, 2006a; Bohlmann, 2008) and are an important source of biomaterials (Bohlmann and Keeling, 2008). Several conifer diterpene synthases (diTPSs) that biosynthesize these compounds have been functionally characterized (Stofer Vogel et al., 1996; Peters et al., 2000; Martin et al., 2004; Keeling and Bohlmann, 2006b; Ro and Bohlmann, 2006). The formation of diterpene resin acids of conifer specialized metabolism parallels the formation of ent-kaurenoic acid in the biosynthesis of the gibberellin diterpenoid phytohormones (Fig. 1; Keeling and Bohlmann, 2006a; Yamaguchi, 2008). In gibberellin biosynthesis, geranylgeranyl diphosphate (GGPP) is cyclized by diTPS activity to ent-copalyl diphosphate (ent-CPP), and the ent-CPP is further cyclized by diTPS activity to ent-kaurene. A cytochrome P450 (P450)-dependent monooxygenase (CYP701) oxidizes ent-kaurene to ent-kaurenoic acid (Davidson et al., 2006), paralleling the activity of a P450 (CYP720B1) that oxidizes abietadiene to abietic acid in conifer diterpene resin acid biosynthesis (Ro et al., 2005). Other P450s further functionalize ent-kaurenoic acid to form the biologically active gibberellins. Surprisingly, no conifer diTPS involved in the general (or primary) metabolism of gibberellins has been reported to date, while metabolite profiles of gibberellins have been well characterized in conifers for their role in flowering (Moritz et al., 1990).Open in a separate windowFigure 1.Comparison of the biosynthesis of gibberellins, as it is known in angiosperm and lower plants, with the biosynthesis of diterpene resin acids in conifers, a large group of gymnosperm trees. In conifers, the formation of diterpene resin acids involves bifunctional diTPS (e.g. abietadiene synthase) for the stepwise cyclization of GGPP into diterpenes such as abietadiene via a copalyl diphosphate intermediate that moves between the two active sites of the bifunctional diTPS (Peters et al., 2001). The products of the diTPS are subsequently oxidized by P450 to the resin acids. In contrast, gibberellin biosynthesis in angiosperms requires two monofunctional diTPSs to convert GGPP into ent-kaurene, which is subsequently modified by P450s. The two monofunctional diTPSs in angiosperm gibberellin biosynthesis are CPS and KS. In the lower plant P. patens, the CPS and KS activities are combined in a bifunctional diTPS similar to the bifunctional diTPS in conifer diterpene resin acid biosynthesis. Prior to this work, to our knowledge, it was not known if the formation of gibberellins in a gymnosperm involves two monofunctional diTPSs, as in angiosperms, or a bifunctional diTPS, as in gymnosperm diterpene resin acid biosynthesis and in P. patens gibberellin biosynthesis. (Figure adapted from Keeling and Bohlmann [2006a].)In the fungi Gibberella fujikuroi (Toyomasu et al., 2000) and Phaeosphaeria species L487 (Kawaide et al., 1997) and in the primitive land plant Physcomitrella patens (Bryophyta; Hayashi et al., 2006; Anterola and Shanle, 2008), the formation of ent-kaurene from GGPP is catalyzed by bifunctional diTPS enzymes. These enzymes contain two active sites. The N-terminal active site domain harbors a conserved DXDD motif and catalyzes the protonation-initiated cyclization of GGPP to ent-CPP (Prisic et al., 2007). In the C-terminal active site domain, a conserved DDXXD motif is essential for the diphosphate ionization-initiated cyclization of ent-CPP to ent-kaurene (Christianson, 2006). The presence of two active sites with their characteristic DXDD and DDXXD motifs resembles the structure of conifer bifunctional diTPSs in specialized metabolism of diterpene resin acid biosynthesis (Fig. 1), such as the grand fir (Abies grandis) abietadiene synthase (AgAS) and Norway spruce (Picea abies) levopimaradiene/abietadiene synthases (PaLAS; Peters et al., 2001; Martin et al., 2004; Keeling and Bohlmann, 2006a). In contrast, the formation of ent-kaurene from GGPP in angiosperms is catalyzed by two separate monofunctional enzymes, one with only the DXDD motif and having ent-copalyl diphosphate synthase (ent-CPS) activity and the other with only the DDXXD motif and having ent-kaurene synthase (ent-KS) activity (Yamaguchi, 2008).A previously published model for the evolution of plant diTPS (Trapp and Croteau, 2001b) suggests that genes encoding the monofunctional CPS and KS enzymes known in angiosperms originated by gene duplication and subfunctionalization (Lynch and Force, 2000) of an ancestral bifunctional CPS/KS gene that may have been similar to the gene for the CPS/KS enzyme of the moss P. patens. The same model also suggests that genes for diTPSs of gymnosperm specialized diterpene resin acid metabolism arose from duplication and subsequent neofunctionalization of an ancestral bifunctional diTPS of the gibberellin pathway (Trapp and Croteau, 2001b). The pathways to specialized oleoresin diterpenes existed in ancient plants prior to the differentiation of gymnosperms and angiosperms (Bray and Anderson, 2009). Vascular plants split from nonvascular plants approximately 500 million years ago, and angiosperms split from gymnosperms approximately 300 million years ago (Palmer et al., 2004). As there has been no report to date of genes involved in gibberellin biosynthesis in gymnosperms, it remains unresolved and cannot be predicted whether conifers have a bifunctional CPS/KS for the formation of ent-kaurene similar to the primitive land plant P. patens and paralleling the diTPSs for conifer specialized diterpene resin acid biosynthesis or whether they have separate monofunctional CPS and KS enzymes, as is the case in angiosperms.In this study, we made use of the extensive EST resources for spruce species (Pavy et al., 2005; Ralph et al., 2008), combined with isolation and sequencing of full-length cDNAs, genomic (g)DNA, and targeted bacterial artificial chromosome (BAC) clones, as well as enzyme assays with recombinant proteins to search for, and functionally characterize, possible monofunctional or bifunctional diTPS for ent-kaurene biosynthesis in a gymnosperm. In summary, we successfully isolated and characterized monofunctional ent-CPS (PgCPS) and ent-KS (PgKS) from white spruce (Picea glauca) and isolated orthologous cDNAs from Sitka spruce (Picea sitchensis). Comparison of enzyme functions and gene structures support common ancestry but different routes of evolution of monofunctional and bifunctional diTPS in conifer general and specialized metabolism, respectively.  相似文献   

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