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1.
ACS Synth Biol ; 12(1): 43-50, 2023 01 20.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36534785

RESUMEN

Continuous directed evolution (CDE) is a powerful tool for enzyme engineering due to the depth and scale of evolutionary search that it enables. If suitably controlled and calibrated, CDE could be widely applied in plant breeding and biotechnology to improve plant enzymes ex planta. We tested this concept by evolving Arabidopsis arogenate dehydratase (AtADT2) for resistance to feedback inhibition. We used an Escherichia coli platform with a phenylalanine biosynthesis pathway reconfigured ("plantized") to mimic the plant pathway, a T7RNA polymerase-base deaminase hypermutation system (eMutaT7), and 4-fluorophenylalanine as selective agent. Selection schemes were prevalidated using a known feedback-resistant AtADT2 variant. We obtained variants that had 4-fluorophenylalanine resistance at least matching the known variant and that carried mutations in the ACT domain responsible for feedback inhibition. We conclude that ex planta CDE of plant enzymes in a microbial platform is a viable way to tailor characteristics that involve interaction with small molecules.


Asunto(s)
Arabidopsis , Arabidopsis/metabolismo , Escherichia coli/metabolismo , p-Fluorofenilalanina , Retroalimentación , Plantas/metabolismo , Tirosina/metabolismo
3.
Phytochemistry ; 202: 113356, 2022 Oct.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35934105

RESUMEN

Like angiosperms from several other families, the leguminous shrub Gastrolobium bilobum R.Br. produces and accumulates fluoroacetate, indicating that it performs the difficult chemistry needed to make a C-F bond. Bioinformatic analyses indicate that plants lack homologs of the only enzymes known to make a C-F bond, i.e., the Actinomycete flurorinases that form 5'-fluoro-5'-deoxyadenosine from S-adenosylmethionine and fluoride ion. To probe the origin of fluoroacetate in G. bilobum we first showed that fluoroacetate accumulates to millimolar levels in young leaves but not older leaves, stems or roots, that leaf fluoroacetate levels vary >20-fold between individual plants and are not markedly raised by sodium fluoride treatment. Young leaves were fed adenosine-13C-ribose, 13C-serine, or 13C-acetate to test plausible biosynthetic routes to fluoroacetate from S-adenosylmethionine, a C3-pyridoxal phosphate complex, or acetyl-CoA, respectively. Incorporation of 13C into expected metabolites confirmed that all three precursors were taken up and metabolized. Consistent with the bioinformatic evidence against an Actinomycete-type pathway, no adenosine-13C-ribose was converted to 13C-fluoroacetate; nor was the characteristic 4-fluorothreonine product of the Actinomycete pathway detected. Similarly, no 13C from acetate or serine was incorporated into fluoroacetate. While not fully excluding the hypothetical pathways that were tested, these negative labeling data imply that G. bilobum creates the C-F bond by an unprecedented biochemical reaction. Enzyme(s) that mediate such a reaction could be of great value in pharmaceutical and agrochemical manufacturing.


Asunto(s)
Fluoruración , S-Adenosilmetionina , Fluoroacetatos/química , Fluoroacetatos/metabolismo , Plantas/metabolismo , Ribosa , Serina
4.
Plant Direct ; 6(6): e415, 2022 Jun.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35774622

RESUMEN

Plants make a variety of specialized metabolites that can mediate interactions with animals, microbes, and competitor plants. Understanding how plants synthesize these compounds enables studies of their biological roles by manipulating their synthesis in vivo as well as producing them in vitro. Acylsugars are a group of protective metabolites that accumulate in the trichomes of many Solanaceae family plants. Acylinositol biosynthesis is of interest because it appears to be restricted to a subgroup of species within the Solanum genus. Previous work characterized a triacylinositol acetyltransferase involved in acylinositol biosynthesis in the Andean fruit plant Solanum quitoense (lulo or naranjilla). We characterized three additional S. quitoense trichome expressed enzymes and found that virus-induced gene silencing of each caused changes in acylinositol accumulation. pH was shown to influence the stability and rearrangement of the product of ASAT1H and could potentially play a role in acylinositol biosynthesis. Surprisingly, the in vitro triacylinositol products of these enzymes are distinct from those that accumulate in planta. This suggests that additional enzymes are required in acylinositol biosynthesis. These characterized S. quitoense enzymes, nonetheless, provide opportunities to test the biological impact and properties of these triacylinositols in vitro.

5.
Plant Physiol ; 188(2): 971-983, 2022 02 04.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34718794

RESUMEN

Continuous directed evolution of enzymes and other proteins in microbial hosts is capable of outperforming classical directed evolution by executing hypermutation and selection concurrently in vivo, at scale, with minimal manual input. Provided that a target enzyme's activity can be coupled to growth of the host cells, the activity can be improved simply by selecting for growth. Like all directed evolution, the continuous version requires no prior mechanistic knowledge of the target. Continuous directed evolution is thus a powerful way to modify plant or non-plant enzymes for use in plant metabolic research and engineering. Here, we first describe the basic features of the yeast (Saccharomyces cerevisiae) OrthoRep system for continuous directed evolution and compare it briefly with other systems. We then give a step-by-step account of three ways in which OrthoRep can be deployed to evolve primary metabolic enzymes, using a THI4 thiazole synthase as an example and illustrating the mutational outcomes obtained. We close by outlining applications of OrthoRep that serve growing demands (i) to change the characteristics of plant enzymes destined for return to plants, and (ii) to adapt ("plantize") enzymes from prokaryotes-especially exotic prokaryotes-to function well in mild, plant-like conditions.


Asunto(s)
Evolución Molecular Dirigida/métodos , Enzimas/genética , Fitomejoramiento/métodos , Proteínas de Plantas/genética , Saccharomyces cerevisiae/genética
6.
Biochemistry ; 60(47): 3555-3565, 2021 11 30.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34729986

RESUMEN

Enzymes have in vivo life spans. Analysis of life spans, i.e., lifetime totals of catalytic turnovers, suggests that nonsurvivable collateral chemical damage from the very reactions that enzymes catalyze is a common but underdiagnosed cause of enzyme death. Analysis also implies that many enzymes are moderately deficient in that their active-site regions are not naturally as hardened against such collateral damage as they could be, leaving room for improvement by rational design or directed evolution. Enzyme life span might also be improved by engineering systems that repair otherwise fatal active-site damage, of which a handful are known and more are inferred to exist. Unfortunately, the data needed to design and execute such improvements are lacking: there are too few measurements of in vivo life span, and existing information about the extent, nature, and mechanisms of active-site damage and repair during normal enzyme operation is too scarce, anecdotal, and speculative to act on. Fortunately, advances in proteomics, metabolomics, cheminformatics, comparative genomics, and structural biochemistry now empower a systematic, data-driven approach for identifying, predicting, and validating instances of active-site damage and its repair. These capabilities would be practically useful in enzyme redesign and improvement of in-use stability and could change our thinking about which enzymes die young in vivo, and why.


Asunto(s)
Biocatálisis , Estabilidad de Enzimas , Dominio Catalítico , Biología de Sistemas
7.
Biochem J ; 478(17): 3265-3279, 2021 09 17.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34409984

RESUMEN

Plant and fungal THI4 thiazole synthases produce the thiamin thiazole moiety in aerobic conditions via a single-turnover suicide reaction that uses an active-site Cys residue as sulfur donor. Multiple-turnover (i.e. catalytic) THI4s lacking an active-site Cys (non-Cys THI4s) that use sulfide as sulfur donor have been biochemically characterized -- but only from archaeal methanogens that are anaerobic, O2-sensitive hyperthermophiles from sulfide-rich habitats. These THI4s prefer iron as cofactor. A survey of prokaryote genomes uncovered non-Cys THI4s in aerobic mesophiles from sulfide-poor habitats, suggesting that multiple-turnover THI4 operation is possible in aerobic, mild, low-sulfide conditions. This was confirmed by testing 23 representative non-Cys THI4s for complementation of an Escherichia coli ΔthiG thiazole auxotroph in aerobic conditions. Sixteen were clearly active, and more so when intracellular sulfide level was raised by supplying Cys, demonstrating catalytic function in the presence of O2 at mild temperatures and indicating use of sulfide or a sulfide metabolite as sulfur donor. Comparative genomic evidence linked non-Cys THI4s with proteins from families that bind, transport, or metabolize cobalt or other heavy metals. The crystal structure of the aerotolerant bacterial Thermovibrio ammonificans THI4 was determined to probe the molecular basis of aerotolerance. The structure suggested no large deviations compared with the structures of THI4s from O2-sensitive methanogens, but is consistent with an alternative catalytic metal. Together with complementation data, use of cobalt rather than iron was supported. We conclude that catalytic THI4s can indeed operate aerobically and that the metal cofactor inserted is a likely natural determinant of aerotolerance.


Asunto(s)
Archaea/enzimología , Proteínas Arqueales/química , Proteínas Arqueales/metabolismo , Bacterias/enzimología , Proteínas de Escherichia coli/química , Proteínas de Escherichia coli/metabolismo , Escherichia coli/enzimología , Proteínas de Saccharomyces cerevisiae/química , Proteínas de Saccharomyces cerevisiae/metabolismo , Saccharomyces cerevisiae/enzimología , Tiamina/biosíntesis , Proteínas Arqueales/genética , Biocatálisis , Dominio Catalítico , Cobalto/metabolismo , Cristalización , Cisteína/metabolismo , Escherichia coli/genética , Proteínas de Escherichia coli/genética , Genómica/métodos , Hierro/metabolismo , Microorganismos Modificados Genéticamente , Oxígeno/metabolismo , Saccharomyces cerevisiae/genética , Sulfuros/metabolismo , Azufre/metabolismo
8.
Elife ; 92020 07 02.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32613943

RESUMEN

Plants produce phylogenetically and spatially restricted, as well as structurally diverse specialized metabolites via multistep metabolic pathways. Hallmarks of specialized metabolic evolution include enzymatic promiscuity and recruitment of primary metabolic enzymes and examples of genomic clustering of pathway genes. Solanaceae glandular trichomes produce defensive acylsugars, with sidechains that vary in length across the family. We describe a tomato gene cluster on chromosome 7 involved in medium chain acylsugar accumulation due to trichome specific acyl-CoA synthetase and enoyl-CoA hydratase genes. This cluster co-localizes with a tomato steroidal alkaloid gene cluster and is syntenic to a chromosome 12 region containing another acylsugar pathway gene. We reconstructed the evolutionary events leading to this gene cluster and found that its phylogenetic distribution correlates with medium chain acylsugar accumulation across the Solanaceae. This work reveals insights into the dynamics behind gene cluster evolution and cell-type specific metabolite diversity.


Plants produce a vast variety of different molecules known as secondary or specialized metabolites to attract pollinating insects, such as bees, or protect themselves against herbivores and pests. The secondary metabolites are made from simple building blocks that are readily available in plants, including amino acids, fatty acids and sugars. Different species of plant, and even different parts of the same plant, produce their own sets of secondary metabolites. For example, the hairs on the surface of tomatoes and other members of the nightshade family of plants make metabolites known as acylsugars. These chemicals deter herbivores and pests from damaging the plants. To make acylsugars, the plants attach long chains known as fatty acyl groups to molecules of sugar, such as sucrose. Some members of the nightshade family produce acylsugars with longer chains than others. In particular, acylsugars with long chains are only found in tomatoes and other closely-related species. It remained unclear how the nightshade family evolved to produce acylsugars with chains of different lengths. To address this question, Fan et al. used genetic and biochemical approaches to study tomato plants and other members of the nightshade family. The experiments identified two genes known as AACS and AECH in tomatoes that produce acylsugars with long chains. These two genes originated from the genes of older enzymes that metabolize fatty acids ­ the building blocks of fats ­ in plant cells. Unlike the older genes, AACS and AECH were only active at the tips of the hairs on the plant's surface. Fan et al. then investigated the evolutionary relationship between 11 members of the nightshade family and two other plant species. This revealed that AACS and AECH emerged in the nightshade family around the same time that longer chains of acylsugars started appearing. These findings provide insights into how plants evolved to be able to produce a variety of secondary metabolites that may protect them from a broader range of pests. The gene cluster identified in this work could be used to engineer other species of crop plants to start producing acylsugars as natural pesticides.


Asunto(s)
Evolución Molecular , Genes de Plantas/genética , Redes y Vías Metabólicas/genética , Familia de Multigenes/genética , Solanaceae/genética , Secuencia Conservada/genética , Variación Genética/genética , Solanaceae/metabolismo , Solanum/genética , Solanum/metabolismo , Tricomas/metabolismo
9.
Plant Physiol ; 183(3): 915-924, 2020 07.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32354879

RESUMEN

Plants make many biologically active, specialized metabolites, which vary in structure, biosynthesis, and the processes they influence. An increasing number of these compounds are documented to protect plants from insects, pathogens, or herbivores or to mediate interactions with beneficial organisms, including pollinators and nitrogen-fixing microbes. Acylsugars, one class of protective compounds, are made in glandular trichomes of plants across the Solanaceae family. While most described acylsugars are acylsucroses, published examples also include acylsugars with hexose cores. The South American fruit crop naranjilla (lulo; Solanum quitoense) produces acylsugars containing a myoinositol core. We identified an enzyme that acetylates triacylinositols, a function homologous to the last step in the acylsucrose biosynthetic pathway of tomato (Solanum lycopersicum). Our analysis reveals parallels between S. lycopersicum acylsucrose and S. quitoense acylinositol biosynthesis, suggesting a common evolutionary origin.


Asunto(s)
Vías Biosintéticas , Inositol/biosíntesis , Solanum lycopersicum/genética , Solanum lycopersicum/metabolismo , Solanum/genética , Solanum/metabolismo , Tricomas/metabolismo , Acilación , Variación Genética
10.
Sci Adv ; 5(4): eaaw3754, 2019 04.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31032420

RESUMEN

Plants produce a myriad of taxonomically restricted specialized metabolites. This diversity-and our ability to correlate genotype with phenotype-makes the evolution of these ecologically and medicinally important compounds interesting and experimentally tractable. Trichomes of tomato and other nightshade family plants produce structurally diverse protective compounds termed acylsugars. While cultivated tomato (Solanum lycopersicum) strictly accumulates acylsucroses, the South American wild relative Solanum pennellii produces copious amounts of acylglucoses. Genetic, transgenic, and biochemical dissection of the S. pennellii acylglucose biosynthetic pathway identified a trichome gland cell-expressed invertase-like enzyme that hydrolyzes acylsucroses (Sopen03g040490). This enzyme acts on the pyranose ring-acylated acylsucroses found in the wild tomato but not on the furanose ring-decorated acylsucroses of cultivated tomato. These results show that modification of the core acylsucrose biosynthetic pathway leading to loss of furanose ring acylation set the stage for co-option of a general metabolic enzyme to produce a new class of protective compounds.


Asunto(s)
Glucosa/metabolismo , Proteínas de Plantas/metabolismo , Solanum lycopersicum/metabolismo , Sacarosa/metabolismo , Tricomas/metabolismo , beta-Fructofuranosidasa/metabolismo , Acilación , Cromosomas de las Plantas/genética , Solanum lycopersicum/genética , Solanum lycopersicum/crecimiento & desarrollo , Proteínas de Plantas/genética , Tricomas/genética , Tricomas/crecimiento & desarrollo , beta-Fructofuranosidasa/genética
11.
Curr Opin Plant Biol ; 49: 8-16, 2019 06.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31009840

RESUMEN

Acylsugars are insecticidal plant specialized metabolites produced in the Solanaceae (nightshade family). Despite having simple constituents, these compounds are unusually structurally diverse. Their structural variations in phylogenetically closely related species enable comparative biochemical approaches to understand acylsugar biosynthesis and pathway diversification. Thus far, varied enzyme classes contributing to their synthesis were characterized in cultivated and wild tomatoes, including from core metabolism - isopropylmalate synthase (Leu) and invertase (carbon) - and a group of evolutionarily related BAHD acyltransferases known as acylsucrose acyltransferases. Gene duplication and neofunctionalization of these enzymes drove acylsugar diversification both within and beyond tomato. The broad set of evolutionary mechanisms underlying acylsugar diversity in Solanaceae make this metabolic network an exemplar for detailed understanding of the evolution of metabolic form and function.


Asunto(s)
Solanaceae , Solanum lycopersicum , Solanum , Aciltransferasas , Proteínas de Plantas , Tricomas
12.
Curr Opin Struct Biol ; 47: 105-112, 2017 12.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28822280

RESUMEN

Specialized metabolic enzymes and metabolite diversity evolve through a variety of mechanisms including promiscuity, changes in substrate specificity, modifications of gene expression and gene duplication. For example, gene duplication and substrate binding site changes led to the evolution of the glucosinolate biosynthetic enzyme, AtIPMDH1, from a Leu biosynthetic enzyme. BAHD acyltransferases illustrate how enzymatic promiscuity leads to metabolite diversity. The examples 4-coumarate:CoA ligase and aromatic acid methyltransferases illustrate how promiscuity can potentiate the evolution of these specialized metabolic enzymes.


Asunto(s)
Evolución Biológica , Metabolismo Energético , Plantas/metabolismo , Aciltransferasas/química , Aciltransferasas/genética , Aciltransferasas/metabolismo , Vías Biosintéticas , Catálisis , Coenzima A Ligasas/química , Coenzima A Ligasas/genética , Coenzima A Ligasas/metabolismo , Duplicación de Gen , Glucosinolatos/metabolismo , Metiltransferasas/química , Metiltransferasas/genética , Metiltransferasas/metabolismo , Plantas/enzimología , Plantas/genética , Especificidad de la Especie , Especificidad por Sustrato
13.
Elife ; 62017 08 30.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28853706

RESUMEN

The diversity of life on Earth is a result of continual innovations in molecular networks influencing morphology and physiology. Plant specialized metabolism produces hundreds of thousands of compounds, offering striking examples of these innovations. To understand how this novelty is generated, we investigated the evolution of the Solanaceae family-specific, trichome-localized acylsugar biosynthetic pathway using a combination of mass spectrometry, RNA-seq, enzyme assays, RNAi and phylogenomics in different non-model species. Our results reveal hundreds of acylsugars produced across the Solanaceae family and even within a single plant, built on simple sugar cores. The relatively short biosynthetic pathway experienced repeated cycles of innovation over the last 100 million years that include gene duplication and divergence, gene loss, evolution of substrate preference and promiscuity. This study provides mechanistic insights into the emergence of plant chemical novelty, and offers a template for investigating the ~300,000 non-model plant species that remain underexplored.


Asunto(s)
Metabolismo de los Hidratos de Carbono/genética , Metabolismo de los Hidratos de Carbono/fisiología , Evolución Molecular , Redes y Vías Metabólicas , Proteínas de Plantas/metabolismo , Solanaceae/metabolismo , Tricomas/metabolismo , Acilación , Aciltransferasas/genética , Aciltransferasas/metabolismo , Secuencia de Bases , Evolución Biológica , Amplificación de Genes , Técnicas de Silenciamiento del Gen , Silenciador del Gen , Espectrometría de Masas , Filogenia , Proteínas de Plantas/genética , ARN de Planta , Solanaceae/clasificación , Solanaceae/enzimología , Solanaceae/genética , Especificidad por Sustrato , Sacarosa/metabolismo , Azúcares/química , Azúcares/metabolismo , Transcriptoma , Tricomas/enzimología , Tricomas/genética
14.
J Biol Chem ; 287(42): 35092-35103, 2012 Oct 12.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-22891247

RESUMEN

Amyloids are highly aggregated proteinaceous fibers historically associated with neurodegenerative conditions including Alzheimers, Parkinsons, and prion-based encephalopathies. Polymerization of amyloidogenic proteins into ordered fibers can be accelerated by preformed amyloid aggregates derived from the same protein in a process called seeding. Seeding of disease-associated amyloids and prions is highly specific and cross-seeding is usually limited or prevented. Here we describe the first study on the cross-seeding potential of bacterial functional amyloids. Curli are produced on the surface of many Gram-negative bacteria where they facilitate surface attachment and biofilm development. Curli fibers are composed of the major subunit CsgA and the nucleator CsgB, which templates CsgA into fibers. Our results showed that curli subunit homologs from Escherichia coli, Salmonella typhimurium LT2, and Citrobacter koseri were able to cross-seed in vitro. The polymerization of Escherichia coli CsgA was also accelerated by fibers derived from a distant homolog in Shewanella oneidensis that shares less than 30% identity in primary sequence. Cross-seeding of curli proteins was also observed in mixed colony biofilms with E. coli and S. typhimurium. CsgA was secreted from E. coli csgB- mutants assembled into fibers on adjacent S. typhimurium that presented CsgB on its surfaces. Similarly, CsgA was secreted by S. typhimurium csgB- mutants formed curli on CsgB-presenting E. coli. This interspecies curli assembly enhanced bacterial attachment to agar surfaces and supported pellicle biofilm formation. Collectively, this work suggests that the seeding specificity among curli homologs is relaxed and that heterogeneous curli fibers can facilitate multispecies biofilm development.


Asunto(s)
Amiloide/metabolismo , Proteínas Bacterianas/metabolismo , Estructuras Bacterianas/metabolismo , Biopelículas/crecimiento & desarrollo , Citrobacter koseri/fisiología , Escherichia coli/fisiología , Salmonella typhimurium/fisiología , Amiloide/genética , Adhesión Bacteriana/fisiología , Proteínas Bacterianas/genética , Estructuras Bacterianas/genética , Mutación
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