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Polyamine biosynthetic diversity in plants and algae
Authors:Christine Fuell  Katherine A Elliott  Colin C Hanfrey  Marina Franceschetti  Anthony J Michael
Institution:1. Institute of Food Research, Norwich Research Park, Colney, Norwich, NR4 7UA, UK;2. Department of Pharmacology, University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center, Dallas, TX, USA;1. Agricultural Institute, Centre for Agricultural Research, Hungarian Academy of Sciences, POB 19, 2462 Martonvásár, Hungary;2. Department of Photosynthesis, Institute of Plant Physiology and Genetics, Bulgarian Academy of Sciences, Acad. G. Bonchev Street, Bldg. 21, 1113 Sofia, Bulgaria;1. State Key Laboratory for Conservation and Utilization of Subtropical Agro-Bioresources, Guangdong Provincial Key Laboratory of Protein Function and Regulation in Agricultural Organisms, College of Life Sciences, South China Agricultural University, Guangzhou, 510642, China;2. College of Horticulture, South China Agricultural University, Guangzhou, 510642, China;3. Department of Biology, Georgia Southern University, Statesboro, GA, 30460-8042, USA;4. Faculty of Pharmaceutical Sciences, Josai University, Sakado, Saitama, 370-0290, Japan;5. Senckenberg Biodiversity and Climate Research Center, Georg-Voigt-Str. 14–16, Frankfurt am Main, D-60325, Germany;6. Graduate School of Life Sciences, Tohoku University, 2-1-1 Katahira, Aoba, Sendai, Miyagi, 980-8577, Japan
Abstract:Polyamine biosynthesis in plants differs from other eukaryotes because of the contribution of genes from the cyanobacterial ancestor of the chloroplast. Plants possess an additional biosynthetic route for putrescine formation from arginine, consisting of the enzymes arginine decarboxylase, agmatine iminohydrolase and N-carbamoylputrescine amidohydrolase, derived from the cyanobacterial ancestor. They also synthesize an unusual tetraamine, thermospermine, that has important developmental roles and which is evolutionarily more ancient than spermine in plants and algae. Single-celled green algae have lost the arginine route and are dependent, like other eukaryotes, on putrescine biosynthesis from the ornithine. Some plants like Arabidopsis thaliana and the moss Physcomitrella patens have lost ornithine decarboxylase and are thus dependent on the arginine route. With its dependence on the arginine route, and the pivotal role of thermospermine in growth and development, Arabidopsis represents the most specifically plant mode of polyamine biosynthesis amongst eukaryotes. A number of plants and algae are also able to synthesize unusual polyamines such as norspermidine, norspermine and longer polyamines, and biosynthesis of these amines likely depends on novel aminopropyltransferases similar to thermospermine synthase, with relaxed substrate specificity. Plants have a rich repertoire of polyamine-based secondary metabolites, including alkaloids and hydroxycinnamic amides, and a number of polyamine-acylating enzymes have been recently characterised. With the genetic tools available for Arabidopsis and other model plants and algae, and the increasing capabilities of comparative genomics, the biological roles of polyamines can now be addressed across the plant evolutionary lineage.
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