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1.
Plant Physiol ; 195(1): 36-47, 2024 Apr 30.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38163646

ABSTRACT

The whole field of synthetic biology (SynBio) is only about 20 years old, and plant SynBio is younger still. Nevertheless, within that short time, SynBio in general has drawn more scientific, philosophical, government, and private-sector interest than anything in biology since the recombinant DNA revolution. Plant SynBio, in particular, is now drawing more and more interest in relation to plants' potential to help solve planetary problems such as carbon capture and storage and replacing fossil fuels and feedstocks. As plant SynBio is so young and so fast-developing, we felt it was too soon to try to analyze its history. Instead, we set out to capture the essence of plant SynBio's origins and early development through interviews with 8 of the field's founders, representing 5 countries and 3 continents. We then distilled these founders' personal recollections and reflections into this review, centering the narrative on timelines for pivotal events, articles, funding programs, and quoting from interviews. We have archived the interview recordings and documented timeline entries. This work provides a resource for future historical scholarship.


Subject(s)
Plants , Synthetic Biology , Synthetic Biology/methods , History, 20th Century , History, 21st Century , Plants/genetics
2.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A ; 118(13)2021 03 30.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33753504

ABSTRACT

Metabolic engineering uses enzymes as parts to build biosystems for specified tasks. Although a part's working life and failure modes are key engineering performance indicators, this is not yet so in metabolic engineering because it is not known how long enzymes remain functional in vivo or whether cumulative deterioration (wear-out), sudden random failure, or other causes drive replacement. Consequently, enzymes cannot be engineered to extend life and cut the high energy costs of replacement. Guided by catalyst engineering, we adopted catalytic cycles until replacement (CCR) as a metric for enzyme functional life span in vivo. CCR is the number of catalytic cycles that an enzyme mediates in vivo before failure or replacement, i.e., metabolic flux rate/protein turnover rate. We used estimated fluxes and measured protein turnover rates to calculate CCRs for ∼100-200 enzymes each from Lactococcus lactis, yeast, and Arabidopsis CCRs in these organisms had similar ranges (<103 to >107) but different median values (3-4 × 104 in L. lactis and yeast versus 4 × 105 in Arabidopsis). In all organisms, enzymes whose substrates, products, or mechanisms can attack reactive amino acid residues had significantly lower median CCR values than other enzymes. Taken with literature on mechanism-based inactivation, the latter finding supports the proposal that 1) random active-site damage by reaction chemistry is an important cause of enzyme failure, and 2) reactive noncatalytic residues in the active-site region are likely contributors to damage susceptibility. Enzyme engineering to raise CCRs and lower replacement costs may thus be both beneficial and feasible.


Subject(s)
Arabidopsis/enzymology , Biocatalysis , Enzymes/chemistry , Lactococcus lactis/enzymology , Metabolic Engineering , Saccharomyces cerevisiae/enzymology
3.
Biochem Soc Trans ; 51(5): 1957-1966, 2023 10 31.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37787016

ABSTRACT

Synthetic biology creates new metabolic processes and improves existing ones using engineered or natural enzymes. These enzymes are often sourced from cells that differ from those in the target plant organ with respect to, e.g. redox potential, effector levels, or proteostasis machinery. Non-native enzymes may thus need to be adapted to work well in their new plant context ('plantized') even if their specificity and kinetics in vitro are adequate. Hence there are two distinct ways in which an enzyme destined for use in plants can require improvement: In catalytic properties such as substrate and product specificity, kcat, and KM; and in general compatibility with the milieu of cells that express the enzyme. Continuous directed evolution systems can deliver both types of improvement and are so far the most broadly effective way to deliver the second type. Accordingly, in this review we provide a short account of continuous evolution methods, emphasizing the yeast OrthoRep system because of its suitability for plant applications. We then cover the down-to-earth and increasingly urgent issues of which enzymes and enzyme properties can - or cannot - be improved in theory, and which in practice are the best to target for crop improvement, i.e. those that are realistically improvable and important enough to warrant deploying continuous directed evolution. We take horticultural crops as examples because of the opportunities they present and to sharpen the focus.


Subject(s)
Crops, Agricultural , Enzymes , Catalysis
4.
Plant Physiol ; 188(2): 971-983, 2022 02 04.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34718794

ABSTRACT

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.


Subject(s)
Directed Molecular Evolution/methods , Enzymes/genetics , Plant Breeding/methods , Plant Proteins/genetics , Saccharomyces cerevisiae/genetics
5.
Metab Eng ; 69: 302-312, 2022 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34958914

ABSTRACT

Spontaneous reactions between metabolites are often neglected in favor of emphasizing enzyme-catalyzed chemistry because spontaneous reaction rates are assumed to be insignificant under physiological conditions. However, synthetic biology and engineering efforts can raise natural metabolites' levels or introduce unnatural ones, so that previously innocuous or nonexistent spontaneous reactions become an issue. Problems arise when spontaneous reaction rates exceed the capacity of a platform organism to dispose of toxic or chemically active reaction products. While various reliable sources list competing or toxic enzymatic pathways' side-reactions, no corresponding compilation of spontaneous side-reactions exists, nor is it possible to predict their occurrence. We addressed this deficiency by creating the Chemical Damage (CD)-MINE resource. First, we used literature data to construct a comprehensive database of metabolite reactions that occur spontaneously in physiological conditions. We then leveraged this data to construct 148 reaction rules describing the known spontaneous chemistry in a substrate-generic way. We applied these rules to all compounds in the ModelSEED database, predicting 180,891 spontaneous reactions. The resulting (CD)-MINE is available at https://minedatabase.mcs.anl.gov/cdmine/#/home and through developer tools. We also demonstrate how damage-prone intermediates and end products are widely distributed among metabolic pathways, and how predicting spontaneous chemical damage helps rationalize toxicity and carbon loss using examples from published pathways to commercial products. We explain how analyzing damage-prone areas in metabolism helps design effective engineering strategies. Finally, we use the CD-MINE toolset to predict the formation of the novel damage product N-carbamoyl proline, and present mass spectrometric evidence for its presence in Escherichia coli.


Subject(s)
Metabolic Networks and Pathways , Cell Cycle Proteins , Databases, Factual , Escherichia coli , Metabolic Networks and Pathways/genetics , Metabolome , Synthetic Biology
6.
Plant Cell ; 31(2): 297-314, 2019 02.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30670486

ABSTRACT

Roughly half the carbon that crop plants fix by photosynthesis is subsequently lost by respiration. Nonessential respiratory activity leading to unnecessary CO2 release is unlikely to have been minimized by natural selection or crop breeding, and cutting this large loss could complement and reinforce the currently dominant yield-enhancement strategy of increasing carbon fixation. Until now, however, respiratory carbon losses have generally been overlooked by metabolic engineers and synthetic biologists because specific target genes have been elusive. We argue that recent advances are at last pinpointing individual enzyme and transporter genes that can be engineered to (1) slow unnecessary protein turnover, (2) replace, relocate, or reschedule metabolic activities, (3) suppress futile cycles, and (4) make ion transport more efficient, all of which can reduce respiratory costs. We identify a set of engineering strategies to reduce respiratory carbon loss that are now feasible and model how implementing these strategies singly or in tandem could lead to substantial gains in crop productivity.


Subject(s)
Carbon/metabolism , Crops, Agricultural/metabolism , Photosynthesis/physiology , Photosynthesis/genetics
7.
Biochem J ; 478(17): 3265-3279, 2021 09 17.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34409984

ABSTRACT

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.


Subject(s)
Archaea/enzymology , Archaeal Proteins/chemistry , Archaeal Proteins/metabolism , Bacteria/enzymology , Escherichia coli Proteins/chemistry , Escherichia coli Proteins/metabolism , Escherichia coli/enzymology , Saccharomyces cerevisiae Proteins/chemistry , Saccharomyces cerevisiae Proteins/metabolism , Saccharomyces cerevisiae/enzymology , Thiamine/biosynthesis , Archaeal Proteins/genetics , Biocatalysis , Catalytic Domain , Cobalt/metabolism , Crystallization , Cysteine/metabolism , Escherichia coli/genetics , Escherichia coli Proteins/genetics , Genomics/methods , Iron/metabolism , Microorganisms, Genetically-Modified , Oxygen/metabolism , Saccharomyces cerevisiae/genetics , Sulfides/metabolism , Sulfur/metabolism
8.
Biochemistry ; 60(47): 3555-3565, 2021 11 30.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34729986

ABSTRACT

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.


Subject(s)
Biocatalysis , Enzyme Stability , Catalytic Domain , Systems Biology
9.
Plant J ; 101(2): 442-454, 2020 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31520508

ABSTRACT

The B vitamins provide essential co-factors for central metabolism in all organisms. In plants, B vitamins have surprising emerging roles in development, stress tolerance and pathogen resistance. Hence, there is a paramount interest in understanding the regulation of vitamin biosynthesis as well as the consequences of vitamin deficiency in crop species. To facilitate genetic analysis of B vitamin biosynthesis and functions in maize, we have mined the UniformMu transposon resource to identify insertional mutations in vitamin pathway genes. A screen of 190 insertion lines for seed and seedling phenotypes identified mutations in biotin, pyridoxine and niacin biosynthetic pathways. Importantly, isolation of independent insertion alleles enabled genetic confirmation of genotype-to-phenotype associations. Because B vitamins are essential for survival, null mutations often have embryo lethal phenotypes that prevent elucidation of subtle, but physiologically important, metabolic consequences of sub-optimal (functional) vitamin status. To circumvent this barrier, we demonstrate a strategy for refined genetic manipulation of vitamin status based on construction of heterozygotes that combine strong and hypomorphic mutant alleles. Dosage analysis of pdx2 alleles in endosperm revealed that endosperm supplies pyridoxine to the developing embryo. Similarly, a hypomorphic bio1 allele enabled analysis of transcriptome and metabolome responses to incipient biotin deficiency in seedling leaves. We show that systemic pipecolic acid accumulation is an early metabolic response to sub-optimal biotin status highlighting an intriguing connection between biotin, lysine metabolism and systemic disease resistance signaling. Seed-stocks carrying insertions for vitamin pathway genes are available for free, public distribution via the Maize Genetics Cooperation Stock Center.


Subject(s)
Vitamin B Complex/genetics , Vitamin B Complex/metabolism , Zea mays/genetics , Zea mays/metabolism , Alleles , Biosynthetic Pathways/genetics , Biosynthetic Pathways/physiology , DNA Transposable Elements/genetics , Endosperm/metabolism , Gene Expression Regulation, Plant , Mutation , Nitrogenous Group Transferases/genetics , Phenotype , Plant Leaves , Plant Proteins/genetics , Plant Proteins/metabolism , Pyridoxine/metabolism , Seeds/genetics , Transcriptome
10.
Rapid Commun Mass Spectrom ; 35(5): e9019, 2021 Mar 15.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33617101

ABSTRACT

RATIONALE: N6-Formyl lysine is a well-known modification of histones and other proteins. It can also be formed as a damaged product from direct formylation of free lysine and accompanied by other lysine derivatives such as acetylated or methylated forms. In relation to the activity of cellular repair enzymes in protein turnover and to lysine metabolism, it is important to accurately quantify the overall ratio of modified lysine to free lysine. METHODS: N6-Formyl lysine was quantified using liquid chromatography/tandem mass spectrometry (LC/MS/MS) with data collected in a non-targeted manner using positive mode electrospray ionization on a Q-Exactive HF+ Orbitrap mass spectrometer. Studies were performed with lysine and deuterated lysine spiked into protein digests and solvents to investigate the extent of spontaneous formation and matrix effects of formation of N6-formyl lysine. RESULTS: We show that N6-formyl lysine, N2-formyl lysine, N6-acetyl lysine, and N2-acetyl lysine are all formed spontaneously during sample preparation and LC/MS/MS analysis, which complicates quantification of these metabolites in biological samples. N6-Formyl lysine was spontaneously formed and correlated to the concentration of lysine. In the sample matrix of protein digests, 0.03% of lysine was spontaneously converted into N6-formyl lysine, and 0.005% of lysine was converted into N6-formyl lysine in pure run solvent. CONCLUSIONS: Spontaneous formation of N6-formyl lysine, N6-acetyl lysine, N2-formyl lysine, and N2-acetyl lysine needs to be subtracted from biologically formed lysine modifications when quantifying these epimetabolites in biological samples.


Subject(s)
Chromatography, High Pressure Liquid/methods , Escherichia coli Proteins/chemistry , Escherichia coli/chemistry , Lysine/chemistry , Tandem Mass Spectrometry/methods , Escherichia coli/metabolism , Escherichia coli Proteins/metabolism , Lysine/metabolism , Metabolomics/methods
11.
Biochem J ; 477(9): 1745-1757, 2020 05 15.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32301498

ABSTRACT

Formaldehyde (HCHO) is a reactive carbonyl compound that formylates and cross-links proteins, DNA, and small molecules. It is of specific concern as a toxic intermediate in the design of engineered pathways involving methanol oxidation or formate reduction. The interest in engineering these pathways is not, however, matched by engineering-relevant information on precisely why HCHO is toxic or on what damage-control mechanisms cells deploy to manage HCHO toxicity. The only well-defined mechanism for managing HCHO toxicity is formaldehyde dehydrogenase-mediated oxidation to formate, which is counterproductive if HCHO is a desired pathway intermediate. We therefore sought alternative HCHO damage-control mechanisms via comparative genomic analysis. This analysis associated homologs of the Escherichia coli pepP gene with HCHO-related one-carbon metabolism. Furthermore, deleting pepP increased the sensitivity of E. coli to supplied HCHO but not other carbonyl compounds. PepP is a proline aminopeptidase that cleaves peptides of the general formula X-Pro-Y, yielding X + Pro-Y. HCHO is known to react spontaneously with cysteine to form the close proline analog thioproline (thiazolidine-4-carboxylate), which is incorporated into proteins and hence into proteolytic peptides. We therefore hypothesized that certain thioproline-containing peptides are toxic and that PepP cleaves these aberrant peptides. Supporting this hypothesis, PepP cleaved the model peptide Ala-thioproline-Ala as efficiently as Ala-Pro-Ala in vitro and in vivo, and deleting pepP increased sensitivity to supplied thioproline. Our data thus (i) provide biochemical genetic evidence that thioproline formation contributes substantially to HCHO toxicity and (ii) make PepP a candidate damage-control enzyme for engineered pathways having HCHO as an intermediate.


Subject(s)
Endopeptidases , Escherichia coli , Formaldehyde/metabolism , Proline/metabolism , Aldehyde Oxidoreductases/metabolism , Bacterial Proteins/metabolism , Cysteine/metabolism , Endopeptidases/genetics , Endopeptidases/metabolism , Escherichia coli/genetics , Escherichia coli/metabolism , Formaldehyde/toxicity , Genes, Bacterial , Genome, Bacterial , Thiazolidines/metabolism
12.
Biochem J ; 477(11): 2055-2069, 2020 06 12.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32441748

ABSTRACT

Like fungi and some prokaryotes, plants use a thiazole synthase (THI4) to make the thiazole precursor of thiamin. Fungal THI4s are suicide enzymes that destroy an essential active-site Cys residue to obtain the sulfur atom needed for thiazole formation. In contrast, certain prokaryotic THI4s have no active-site Cys, use sulfide as sulfur donor, and are truly catalytic. The presence of a conserved active-site Cys in plant THI4s and other indirect evidence implies that they are suicidal. To confirm this, we complemented the Arabidopsistz-1 mutant, which lacks THI4 activity, with a His-tagged Arabidopsis THI4 construct. LC-MS analysis of tryptic peptides of the THI4 extracted from leaves showed that the active-site Cys was predominantly in desulfurated form, consistent with THI4 having a suicide mechanism in planta. Unexpectedly, transcriptome data mining and deep proteome profiling showed that barley, wheat, and oat have both a widely expressed canonical THI4 with an active-site Cys, and a THI4-like paralog (non-Cys THI4) that has no active-site Cys and is the major type of THI4 in developing grains. Transcriptomic evidence also indicated that barley, wheat, and oat grains synthesize thiamin de novo, implying that their non-Cys THI4s synthesize thiazole. Structure modeling supported this inference, as did demonstration that non-Cys THI4s have significant capacity to complement thiazole auxotrophy in Escherichia coli. There is thus a prima facie case that non-Cys cereal THI4s, like their prokaryotic counterparts, are catalytic thiazole synthases. Bioenergetic calculations show that, relative to suicide THI4s, such enzymes could save substantial energy during the grain-filling period.


Subject(s)
Arabidopsis Proteins , Arabidopsis , Ligases , Models, Molecular , Plants, Genetically Modified , Thiamine , Thiazoles/metabolism , Arabidopsis/enzymology , Arabidopsis/genetics , Arabidopsis Proteins/chemistry , Arabidopsis Proteins/genetics , Arabidopsis Proteins/metabolism , Catalysis , Computational Biology , Escherichia coli/enzymology , Escherichia coli/genetics , Genetic Complementation Test , Ligases/chemistry , Ligases/genetics , Ligases/metabolism , Plants, Genetically Modified/enzymology , Plants, Genetically Modified/genetics , Protein Domains , Thiamine/biosynthesis , Thiamine/genetics
14.
Chembiochem ; 21(24): 3495-3499, 2020 12 11.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32776704

ABSTRACT

Homochirality is a signature of biological systems. The essential and ubiquitous cofactor S-adenosyl-l-methionine (SAM) is synthesized in cells from adenosine triphosphate and l-methionine to yield exclusively the (S,S)-SAM diastereomer. (S,S)-SAM plays a crucial role as the primary methyl donor in transmethylation reactions important to the development and homeostasis of all organisms from bacteria to humans. However, (S,S)-SAM slowly racemizes at the sulfonium center to yield the inactive (R,S)-SAM, which can inhibit methyltransferases. Control of SAM homochirality has been shown to involve homocysteine S-methyltransferases in plants, insects, worms, yeast, and in ∼18 % of bacteria. Herein, we show that a recombinant protein containing a domain of unknown function (DUF62) from the actinomycete bacterium Salinispora tropica functions as a stereoselective (R,S)-SAM hydrolase (adenosine-forming). DUF62 proteins are encoded in the genomes of 21 % of bacteria and 42 % of archaea and potentially represent a novel mechanism to remediate SAM damage.


Subject(s)
Hydrolases/metabolism , S-Adenosylmethionine/metabolism , Hydrolases/chemistry , Micromonosporaceae/enzymology , Molecular Structure , S-Adenosylmethionine/chemistry , Stereoisomerism
16.
Plant Physiol ; 179(3): 958-968, 2019 03.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30337452

ABSTRACT

Plants synthesize the thiazole precursor of thiamin (cThz-P) via THIAMIN4 (THI4), a suicide enzyme that mediates one reaction cycle and must then be degraded and resynthesized. It has been estimated that this THI4 turnover consumes 2% to 12% of the maintenance energy budget and that installing an energy-efficient alternative pathway could substantially increase crop yield potential. Available data point to two natural alternatives to the suicidal THI4 pathway: (i) nonsuicidal prokaryotic THI4s that lack the active-site Cys residue on which suicide activity depends, and (ii) an uncharacterized thiazole synthesis pathway in flowers of the tropical arum lily Caladium bicolor that enables production and emission of large amounts of the cThz-P analog 4-methyl-5-vinylthiazole (MVT). We used functional complementation of an Escherichia coli ΔthiG strain to identify a nonsuicidal bacterial THI4 (from Thermovibrio ammonificans) that can function in conditions like those in plant cells. We explored whether C. bicolor synthesizes MVT de novo via a novel route, via a suicidal or a nonsuicidal THI4, or by catabolizing thiamin. Analysis of developmental changes in MVT emission, extractable MVT, thiamin level, and THI4 expression indicated that C. bicolor flowers make MVT de novo via a massively expressed THI4 and that thiamin is not involved. Functional complementation tests indicated that C. bicolor THI4, which has the active-site Cys needed to operate suicidally, may be capable of suicidal and - in hypoxic conditions - nonsuicidal operation. T. ammonificans and C. bicolor THI4s are thus candidate parts for rational redesign or directed evolution of efficient, nonsuicidal THI4s for use in crop improvement.


Subject(s)
Thiamine/biosynthesis , Thiazoles/metabolism , Araceae/enzymology , Bacteria/enzymology , Bacterial Proteins/chemistry , Bacterial Proteins/genetics , Bacterial Proteins/physiology , Biosynthetic Pathways , Escherichia coli/genetics , Metabolic Engineering/methods , Methanococcus/enzymology , Plants/metabolism
17.
Biochem J ; 476(4): 683-697, 2019 02 19.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30692244

ABSTRACT

The tripeptide glutathione (GSH) is implicated in various crucial physiological processes including redox buffering and protection against heavy metal toxicity. GSH is abundant in plants, with reported intracellular concentrations typically in the 1-10 mM range. Various aminotransferases can inadvertently transaminate the amino group of the γ-glutamyl moiety of GSH to produce deaminated glutathione (dGSH), a metabolite damage product. It was recently reported that an amidase known as Nit1 participates in dGSH breakdown in mammals and yeast. Plants have a hitherto uncharacterized homolog of the Nit1 amidase. We show that recombinant Arabidopsis Nit1 (At4g08790) has high and specific amidase activity towards dGSH. Ablating the Arabidopsis Nit1 gene causes a massive accumulation of dGSH and other marked changes to the metabolome. All plant Nit1 sequences examined had predicted plastidial targeting peptides with a potential second start codon whose use would eliminate the targeting peptide. In vitro transcription/translation assays show that both potential translation start codons in Arabidopsis Nit1 were used and confocal microscopy of Nit1-GFP fusions in plant cells confirmed both cytoplasmic and plastidial localization. Furthermore, we show that Arabidopsis enzymes present in leaf extracts convert GSH to dGSH at a rate of 2.8 pmol min-1 mg-1 in the presence of glyoxalate as an amino acceptor. Our data demonstrate that plants have a dGSH repair system that is directed to at least two cellular compartments via the use of alternative translation start sites.


Subject(s)
Amidohydrolases , Aminohydrolases , Arabidopsis Proteins , Arabidopsis , Glutathione/metabolism , Amidohydrolases/genetics , Amidohydrolases/metabolism , Aminohydrolases/genetics , Aminohydrolases/metabolism , Arabidopsis/enzymology , Arabidopsis/genetics , Arabidopsis Proteins/genetics , Arabidopsis Proteins/metabolism , Cytoplasm/enzymology , Cytoplasm/genetics , Plastids/enzymology , Plastids/genetics
18.
J Biol Chem ; 293(21): 8255-8263, 2018 05 25.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29626092

ABSTRACT

Cellular thiols such as cysteine spontaneously and readily react with the respiratory intermediate fumarate, resulting in the formation of stable S-(2-succino)-adducts. Fumarate-mediated succination of thiols increases in certain tumors and in response to glucotoxicity associated with diabetes. Therefore, S-(2-succino)-adducts such as S-(2-succino)cysteine (2SC) are considered oncometabolites and biomarkers for human disease. No disposal routes for S-(2-succino)-compounds have been reported prior to this study. Here, we show that Bacillus subtilis metabolizes 2SC to cysteine using a pathway encoded by the yxe operon. The first step is N-acetylation of 2SC followed by an oxygenation that we propose results in the release of oxaloacetate and N-acetylcysteine, which is deacetylated to give cysteine. Knockouts of the genes predicted to mediate each step in the pathway lose the ability to grow on 2SC as the sulfur source and accumulate the expected upstream metabolite(s). We further show that N-acetylation of 2SC relieves toxicity. This is the first demonstration of a metabolic disposal route for any S-(2-succino)-compound, paving the way toward the identification of corresponding pathways in other species.


Subject(s)
Bacillus subtilis/metabolism , Cysteine/analogs & derivatives , Fumarates/metabolism , Metabolomics , Neoplasms/pathology , Operon , Acetylation , Bacillus subtilis/genetics , Cysteine/metabolism , Neoplasms/genetics , Signal Transduction
19.
Plant J ; 95(6): 1102-1113, 2018 09.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29924895

ABSTRACT

Genome-scale metabolic reconstructions help us to understand and engineer metabolism. Next-generation sequencing technologies are delivering genomes and transcriptomes for an ever-widening range of plants. While such omic data can, in principle, be used to compare metabolic reconstructions in different species, organs and environmental conditions, these comparisons require a standardized framework for the reconstruction of metabolic networks from transcript data. We previously introduced PlantSEED as a framework covering primary metabolism for 10 species. We have now expanded PlantSEED to include 39 species and provide tools that enable automated annotation and metabolic reconstruction from transcriptome data. The algorithm for automated annotation in PlantSEED propagates annotations using a set of signature k-mers (short amino acid sequences characteristic of particular proteins) that identify metabolic enzymes with an accuracy of about 97%. PlantSEED reconstructions are built from a curated template that includes consistent compartmentalization for more than 100 primary metabolic subsystems. Together, the annotation and reconstruction algorithms produce reconstructions without gaps and with more accurate compartmentalization than existing resources. These tools are available via the PlantSEED web interface at http://modelseed.org, which enables users to upload, annotate and reconstruct from private transcript data and simulate metabolic activity under various conditions using flux balance analysis. We demonstrate the ability to compare these metabolic reconstructions with a case study involving growth on several nitrogen sources in roots of four species.


Subject(s)
Computational Biology/methods , Databases, Factual , Metabolomics/methods , Plants/metabolism , Algorithms , Genome, Plant/genetics , High-Throughput Nucleotide Sequencing , Metabolic Networks and Pathways , Plants/genetics , Transcriptome
20.
Plant Physiol ; 191(4): 2067-2069, 2023 04 03.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36703191
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