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1.
Plant Direct ; 8(5): e588, 2024 May.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38766509

ABSTRACT

Plants use chemistry to overcome diverse challenges. A particularly striking chemical trait that some plants possess is the ability to synthesize massive amounts of epicuticular wax that accumulates on the plant's surfaces as a white coating visible to the naked eye. The ability to synthesize basic wax molecules appears to be shared among virtually all land plants, and our knowledge of ubiquitous wax compound synthesis is reasonably advanced. However, the ability to synthesize thick layers of visible epicuticular crystals ("wax blooms") is restricted to specific lineages, and our knowledge of how wax blooms differ from ubiquitous wax layers is less developed. Here, we recruited the help of citizen scientists and middle school students to survey the wax bloom chemistry of 78 species spanning dicot, monocot, and gymnosperm lineages. Using gas chromatography-mass spectrometry, we found that the major wax classes reported from bulk wax mixtures can be present in wax bloom crystals, with fatty acids, fatty alcohols, and alkanes being present in many species' bloom crystals. In contrast, other compounds including aldehydes, ketones, secondary alcohols, and triterpenoids were present in only a few species' wax bloom crystals. By mapping the 78 wax bloom chemical profiles onto a phylogeny and using phylogenetic comparative analyses, we found that secondary alcohol and triterpenoid-rich wax blooms were present in lineage-specific patterns that would not be expected to arise by chance. That finding is consistent with reports that secondary alcohol biosynthesis enzymes are found only in certain lineages but was a surprise for triterpenoids, which are intracellular components in virtually all plant lineages. Thus, our data suggest that a lineage-specific mechanism other than biosynthesis exists that enables select species to generate triterpenoid-rich surface wax crystals. Overall, our study outlines a general mode in which research scientists can collaborate with citizen scientists as well as middle and high school classrooms not only to enhance data collection and generate testable hypotheses but also to directly involve classrooms in the scientific process and inspire future STEM workers.

2.
Am J Bot ; 111(4): e16308, 2024 Apr.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38581167

ABSTRACT

PREMISE: Better understanding of the relationship between plant specialized metabolism and traditional medicine has the potential to aid in bioprospecting and untangling of cross-cultural use patterns. However, given the limited information available for metabolites in most plant species, understanding medicinal use-metabolite relationships can be difficult. The order Caryophyllales has a unique pattern of lineages of tyrosine- or phenylalanine-dominated specialized metabolism, represented by mutually exclusive anthocyanin and betalain pigments, making Caryophyllales a compelling system to explore the relationship between medicine and metabolites by using pigment as a proxy for dominant metabolism. METHODS: We compiled a list of medicinal species in select tyrosine- or phenylalanine-dominant families of Caryophyllales (Nepenthaceae, Polygonaceae, Simmondsiaceae, Microteaceae, Caryophyllaceae, Amaranthaceae, Limeaceae, Molluginaceae, Portulacaceae, Cactaceae, and Nyctaginaceae) by searching scientific literature until no new uses were recovered. We then tested for phylogenetic clustering of uses using a "hot nodes" approach. To test potential non-metabolite drivers of medicinal use, like how often humans encounter a species (apparency), we repeated the analysis using only North American species across the entire order and performed phylogenetic generalized least squares regression (PGLS) with occurrence data from the Global Biodiversity Information Facility (GBIF). RESULTS: We hypothesized families with tyrosine-enriched metabolism would show clustering of different types of medicinal use compared to phenylalanine-enriched metabolism. Instead, wide-ranging, apparent clades in Polygonaceae and Amaranthaceae are overrepresented across nearly all types of medicinal use. CONCLUSIONS: Our results suggest that apparency is a better predictor of medicinal use than metabolism, although metabolism type may still be a contributing factor.


Subject(s)
Caryophyllales , Plants, Medicinal , Caryophyllales/metabolism , Caryophyllales/genetics , Plants, Medicinal/metabolism , Medicine, Traditional , Phylogeny , Tyrosine/metabolism , Betalains/metabolism , Phenylalanine/metabolism
3.
Science ; 383(6678): 108-113, 2024 01 05.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38175904

ABSTRACT

Composite traits involve multiple components that, only when combined, gain a new synergistic function. Thus, how they evolve remains a puzzle. We combined field experiments, microscopy, chemical analyses, and laser Doppler vibrometry with comparative phylogenetic analyses to show that two carnivorous Nepenthes pitcher plant species independently evolved similar adaptations in three distinct traits to acquire a new, composite trapping mechanism. Comparative analyses suggest that this new trait arose convergently through "spontaneous coincidence" of the required trait combination, rather than directional selection in the component traits. Our results indicate a plausible mechanism for composite trait evolution and highlight the importance of stochastic phenotypic variation as a facilitator of evolutionary novelty.


Subject(s)
Adaptation, Biological , Biological Evolution , Carnivorous Plant , Caryophyllales , Multifactorial Inheritance , Phylogeny , Carnivorous Plant/classification , Carnivorous Plant/genetics , Caryophyllales/classification , Caryophyllales/genetics , Adaptation, Biological/genetics
4.
Plant Physiol Biochem ; 198: 107679, 2023 May.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37121165

ABSTRACT

Plant cuticles cover aerial organs to limit non-stomatal water loss and protect against insects and pathogens. Cuticles contain complex mixtures of fatty acid-derived waxes, with various chain lengths and diverse functional groups. To further our understanding of the chemical diversity and biosynthesis of these compounds, this study investigated leaf cuticular waxes of Welsh onion (Allium fistulosum L.) wild type and a wax-deficient mutant. Leaf waxes were extracted with chloroform, separated using thin layer chromatography (TLC), and analyzed using gas chromatography-mass spectrometry (GC-MS). The extracts contained typical wax compound classes found in nearly all plant lineages but also two uncommon compound classes. Analyses of characteristic MS fragmentation patterns followed by comparisons with synthetic standards identified the latter as very-long-chain ketones and primary ketols. The ketols were minor compounds, with chain lengths ranging from C28 to C32 and carbonyls mainly on C-18 and C-20 in wild type wax, and a C28 chain with C-16 carbonyl in the mutant. The ketones made up 70% of total wax in the wild type, consisting mainly of C31 isomers with carbonyl group on C-14 or C-16. In contrast, the mutant wax comprised only 4% ketones, with chain lengths C27 and C29 and carbonyls predominantly on C-12 and C-14, respectively. A two-carbon homolog shift between wild type and mutant was also observed in the primary alcohols (a major wax compound class), whilst alkanes exhibited a four-carbon shift. Overall, the compositional data shed light on possible biosynthetic pathways to wax ketones that can be tested in future studies.


Subject(s)
Allium , Waxes , Waxes/metabolism , Onions/genetics , Onions/metabolism , Allium/metabolism , Alcohols/analysis , Alcohols/chemistry , Alcohols/metabolism , Plant Leaves/metabolism , Ketones/analysis , Ketones/chemistry , Ketones/metabolism , Carbon/metabolism
5.
Planta ; 257(4): 74, 2023 Mar 06.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36879182

ABSTRACT

MAIN CONCLUSION: The alpine meadow plants showed great intra- and inter-genera variations of chemical profiles of cuticular waxes. Developing an understanding of wax structure-function relationships that will help us tackle global climate change requires a detailed understanding of plant wax chemistry. The goal in this study was to provide a catalog of wax structures, abundances, and compositions on alpine meadow plants. Here, leaf waxes from 33 plant species belonging to 11 families were sampled from alpine meadows of the east side of the Qinghai-Tibet Plateau. Across these species, total wax coverage varied from 2.30 µg cm-2 to 40.70 µg cm-2, showing variation both within as well as between genera and suggesting that wax variation is subject to both environmental and genetic effects. Across all wax samples, more than 140 wax compounds belonging to 13 wax compound classes were identified, including both ubiquitous wax compounds and lineage-specific compounds. Among the ubiquitous compounds (primary alcohols, alkyl esters, aldehydes, alkanes, and fatty acids), chain length profiles across a wide range of species point to key differences in the chain length specificity of alcohol and alkane formation machinery. The lineage-specific wax compound classes (diols, secondary alcohols, lactones, iso-alkanes, alkyl resorcinols, phenylethyl esters, cinnamate esters, alkyl benzoates, and triterpenoids) nearly all consisted of isomers with varying chain lengths or functional group positions, making the diversity of specialized wax compounds immense. The comparison of species relationships between chemical data and genetic data highlighted the importance of inferring phylogenetic relationships from data sets that contain a large number of variables that do not respond to environmental stimuli.


Subject(s)
Aldehydes , Grassland , Phylogeny , Tibet , Alkanes , Esters
6.
Plant Sci ; 330: 111646, 2023 May.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36806611

ABSTRACT

Sugarcane aphid (SCA; Melanaphis sacchari) is a devastating pest of sorghum (Sorghum bicolor) that colonizes sorghum plants at different growth stages. Leaf surface characteristics and sugars often influence aphid settling and feeding on host plants. However, how changes in cuticular waxes and sugar levels affect SCA establishment and feeding at different development stages of sorghum have not been explored. In this study, two- and six-week-old BTx623 plants, a reference line of sorghum, was used to evaluate plant-aphid interactions. Monitoring aphid feeding behavior using Electrical Penetration Graph (EPG) technique revealed that aphids spent more time in the sieve element phase of six-week-old plants compared to two-week-old plants. Significant differences were found in the time spent to reach the first sieve element and pathway phases between the two- and six-week-old plants. However, no-choice aphid bioassays displayed that SCA population numbers were higher in two-week-old plants compared to six-week-old plants. Differences in the abundance of wax and sugar contents were analyzed to determine how these plant components influenced aphid feeding and proliferation. Among the cuticular wax compounds analyzed, α-amyrin and isoarborinone increased after 10 days of aphid infestation only in six-week-old plants. Trehalose content was significantly increased by SCA feeding on two- and six-week-old plants. Furthermore, SCA feeding depressed sucrose content and increased levels of glucose and fructose in two-week-old but not in six-week-old plants. Overall, our study indicates that plant age is a determinant for SCA feeding, and subtle changes in triterpenoids and available sugars influence SCA establishment on sorghum plants.


Subject(s)
Aphids , Saccharum , Sorghum , Animals , Sugars , Edible Grain
7.
Planta ; 257(1): 22, 2022 Dec 20.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36538118

ABSTRACT

MAIN CONCLUSION: Quantification of cuticular waxes coupled with insect bioassays and feeding behavior analysis demonstrate that long-chain C32 fatty alcohol impacts host plant selection by aphids. Cuticular waxes constitute the first point of contact between plants and their environment, and it also protect plants from external stresses. However, the role of waxes in Sorghum bicolor (sorghum) against sugarcane aphid (Melanaphis sacchari), a relatively new and devastating pest of sorghum in the U.S., is not fully understood. In this study, we monitored sugarcane aphid behavior on two genotypes of young sorghum plants with different wax chemistry: a wild-type plant (bloom) with lower C32 alcohol cuticular wax, and a mutant plant (bloomless) with 1.6 times the amount of wax compared to wild-type plants. No-choice aphid bioassays revealed that sugarcane aphid reproduction did not vary between wild-type and the bloomless plants. Electrical Penetration Graph (EPG) monitoring indicated that the sugarcane aphids spent comparable amount of time feeding from the sieve elements of the wild-type and bloomless plants. However, aphids spent more time feeding on the xylem sap of the bloomless plants compared to the wild-type plants. Furthermore, aphid choice assays revealed that the sugarcane aphids preferred to settle on bloomless compared to wild-type plants. Overall, our results suggest that cuticular waxes on young sorghum leaves play a critical role in influencing host plant selection by sugarcane aphids.


Subject(s)
Aphids , Saccharum , Sorghum , Animals , Sorghum/genetics , Waxes , Feeding Behavior , Edible Grain
8.
Plant J ; 111(4): 954-965, 2022 08.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35749584

ABSTRACT

Plants are able to construct lineage-specific natural products from a wide array of their core metabolic pathways. Considerable progress has been made toward documenting and understanding, for example, phenylpropanoid natural products derived from phosphoenolpyruvate via the shikimate pathway, terpenoid compounds built using isopentyl pyrophosphate, and alkaloids generated by the extensive modification of amino acids. By comparison, natural products derived from fatty acids have received little attention, except for unusual fatty acids in seed oils and jasmonate-like oxylipins. However, scattered but numerous reports show that plants are able to generate many structurally diverse compounds from fatty acids, including some with highly elaborate and unique structural features that have novel bioproduct functionalities. Furthermore, although recent work has shed light on multiple new fatty acid natural product biosynthesis pathways and products in diverse plant species, these discoveries have not been reviewed. The aims of this work, therefore, are to (i) review and systematize our current knowledge of the structures and biosynthesis of fatty acid-derived natural products that are not seed oils or jasmonate-type oxylipins, specifically, polyacetylenic, very-long-chain, and aromatic fatty acid-derived natural products, and (ii) suggest priorities for future investigative steps that will bring our knowledge of fatty acid-derived natural products closer to the levels of knowledge that we have attained for other phytochemical classes.


Subject(s)
Biological Products , Oxylipins , Biological Products/metabolism , Fatty Acids/metabolism , Oxylipins/metabolism , Plant Oils/metabolism , Plants/metabolism
9.
J Exp Bot ; 73(9): 2889-2904, 2022 05 13.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35560192

ABSTRACT

The polyacetylenic lipids falcarinol, falcarindiol, and associated derivatives, termed falcarins, have a widespread taxonomical distribution in the plant kingdom and have received increasing interest for their demonstrated health-promoting properties as anti-cancer and anti-inflammatory agents. These fatty acid-derived compounds are also linked to plant pathogen resistance through their potent antimicrobial properties. Falcarin-type polyacetylenes, which contain two conjugated triple bonds, are derived from structural modifications of the common fatty acid oleic acid. In the past half century, much progress has been made in understanding the structural diversity of falcarins in the plant kingdom, whereas limited progress has been made on elucidating falcarin function in plant-pathogen interactions. More recently, an understanding of the biosynthetic machinery underlying falcarin biosynthesis has emerged. This review provides a concise summary of the current state of knowledge on falcarin structural diversity, biosynthesis, and plant defense properties. We also present major unanswered questions about falcarin biosynthesis and function.


Subject(s)
Fatty Acids , Plants , Polyacetylene Polymer
10.
Phytochemistry ; 200: 113206, 2022 Aug.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35436478

ABSTRACT

Cannabis sativa is a versatile crop that can be cultivated for fiber, seed, or phytochemicals. To take advantage of this versatility and the potential of Cannabis as a feedstock for the bioeconomy, genomics-enabled breeding programs must be strengthened and expanded. This work contributes to the foundation for such by investigating the phytochemistry and genomics of feral Cannabis populations collected from seventeen counties across the climate gradient of Nebraska. Flower tissue from male and female plants (28 total) was studied using (i) gas chromatography-mass spectrometry to assess cannabinoid profiles and (ii) RNA sequencing to determine transcript abundances. Both male and female flower tissues produced cannabinoids, and, though the compounds were more abundant in female flower tissue, the primary cannabinoid in both was usually cannabidiol. The expression of genes that mediate early steps on the cannabinoid biosynthetic pathway were upregulated in female relative to male flowers, suggesting that female versus male flower tissue cannabinoid abundance may be controlled at least in part at the transcriptional level. DNA sequencing was used to place feral Cannabis plants from Nebraska into a previously described genomic context, revealing that all the plants studied here are much more similar to previously characterized hemp-type Cannabis plants than to drug-type Cannabis plants, at least at the genetic level. This work provides foundational phytochemical knowledge and a large set of high-quality single nucleotide polymorphism markers for future studies of feral Nebraska Cannabis.


Subject(s)
Cannabinoids , Cannabis , Hallucinogens , Cannabinoids/analysis , Cannabinoids/chemistry , Cannabis/chemistry , Cannabis/genetics , Genetic Variation , Nebraska , Phytochemicals/analysis , Plant Breeding
11.
Curr Opin Plant Biol ; 66: 102191, 2022 04.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35220088

ABSTRACT

Plant-derived oils are a major agricultural product that exist in both ubiquitous forms such as common vegetable oils and in specialized forms such as castor oil and coconut oil. These specialized oils are the result of lineage-specific metabolic pathways that create oils rich in unusual fatty acids. Considerable progress has been made toward understanding the enzymes that mediate fatty acid biosynthesis, triacylglycerol assembly, and oil storage. However, efforts to translate this knowledge into renewable bioproducts via engineered oil-producing plants and algae have had limited success. Here, we review recent evidence that protein-protein interactions in each of the three major phases of oil formation appear to have profound effects on specialized oil accumulation. We suggest that furthering our knowledge of the noncatalytic attributes of enzymes and other proteins involved in oil formation will be a critical step toward creating renewable bioproducts derived from high performing, engineered oilseeds.


Subject(s)
Plant Oils , Seeds , Fatty Acids/metabolism , Plant Oils/metabolism , Plants/metabolism , Seeds/metabolism , Triglycerides/metabolism
12.
Plant Mol Biol ; 109(4-5): 355-367, 2022 Jul.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34816350

ABSTRACT

To cope with relentless environmental pressures, plants produce an arsenal of structurally diverse chemicals, often called specialized metabolites. These lineage-specific compounds are derived from the simple building blocks made by ubiquitous core metabolic pathways. Although the structures of many specialized metabolites are known, the underlying metabolic pathways and the evolutionary events that have shaped the plant chemical diversity landscape are only beginning to be understood. However, with the advent of multi-omics data sets and the relative ease of studying pathways in previously intractable non-model species, plant specialized metabolic pathways are now being systematically identified. These large datasets also provide a foundation for comparative, phylogeny-guided studies of plant metabolism. Comparisons of metabolic traits and features like chemical abundances, enzyme activities, or gene sequences from phylogenetically diverse plants provide insights into how metabolic pathways evolved. This review highlights the power of studying evolution through the lens of comparative biochemistry, particularly how placing metabolism into a phylogenetic context can help a researcher identify the metabolic innovations enabling the evolution of structurally diverse plant metabolites.


Subject(s)
Metabolic Networks and Pathways , Plants , Evolution, Molecular , Metabolic Networks and Pathways/genetics , Phylogeny , Plants/genetics , Plants/metabolism
13.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A ; 118(12)2021 03 23.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33723068

ABSTRACT

Virtually all land plants are coated in a cuticle, a waxy polyester that prevents nonstomatal water loss and is important for heat and drought tolerance. Here, we describe a likely genetic basis for a divergence in cuticular wax chemistry between Sorghum bicolor, a drought tolerant crop widely cultivated in hot climates, and its close relative Zea mays (maize). Combining chemical analyses, heterologous expression, and comparative genomics, we reveal that: 1) sorghum and maize leaf waxes are similar at the juvenile stage but, after the juvenile-to-adult transition, sorghum leaf waxes are rich in triterpenoids that are absent from maize; 2) biosynthesis of the majority of sorghum leaf triterpenoids is mediated by a gene that maize and sorghum both inherited from a common ancestor but that is only functionally maintained in sorghum; and 3) sorghum leaf triterpenoids accumulate in a spatial pattern that was previously shown to strengthen the cuticle and decrease water loss at high temperatures. These findings uncover the possibility for resurrection of a cuticular triterpenoid-synthesizing gene in maize that could create a more heat-tolerant water barrier on the plant's leaf surfaces. They also provide a fundamental understanding of sorghum leaf waxes that will inform efforts to divert surface carbon to intracellular storage for bioenergy and bioproduct innovations.


Subject(s)
Gene Expression Regulation, Plant , Plant Leaves/metabolism , Sorghum/genetics , Sorghum/metabolism , Steroids/biosynthesis , Waxes/metabolism , Adaptation, Biological , Computational Biology , Droughts , Gas Chromatography-Mass Spectrometry , Gene Expression Profiling , Genome, Plant , Molecular Structure , Phylogeny , Sorghum/classification , Steroids/chemistry , Triterpenes/metabolism , Waxes/chemistry , Zea mays/genetics , Zea mays/metabolism
14.
Biochem Mol Biol Educ ; 49(2): 167-188, 2021 03.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32833339

ABSTRACT

Our climate is changing due to anthropogenic emissions of greenhouse gases from the production and use of fossil fuels. Present atmospheric levels of CO2 were last seen 3 million years ago, when planetary temperature sustained high Arctic camels. As scientists and educators, we should feel a professional responsibility to discuss major scientific issues like climate change, and its profound consequences for humanity, with students who look up to us for knowledge and leadership, and who will be most affected in the future. We offer simple to complex backgrounds and examples to enable and encourage biochemistry educators to routinely incorporate this most important topic into their classrooms.


Subject(s)
Climate Change , Curriculum , Molecular Biology/education , Humans
16.
Sci Rep ; 10(1): 8011, 2020 05 15.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32415159

ABSTRACT

Cork is a water-impermeable, suberin-based material harboring lignin, (hemi)cellulose, and extractable small molecules (primarily triterpenoids). Extractables strongly influence the properties of suberin-based materials. Though these previous findings suggest a key role for triterpenoids in cork material quality, directly testing this idea is hindered in part because it is not known which genes control cork triterpenoid biosynthesis. Here, we used gas chromatography and mass spectrometry to determine that the majority (>85%) of non-polar extractables from cork were pentacyclic triterpenoids, primarily betulinic acid, friedelin, and hydroxy-friedelin. In other plants, triterpenoids are generated by oxidosqualene cyclases (OSCs). Accordingly, we mined Quercus suber EST libraries for OSC fragments to use in a RACE PCR-based approach and cloned three full-length OSC transcripts from cork (QsOSC1-3). Heterologous expression in Saccharomyces cerevisiae revealed that QsOSC1-3 respectively encoded enzymes with lupeol synthase, mixed α- and ß-amyrin synthase, and mixed ß-amyrin and friedelin synthase activities. These activities together account for the backbone structures of the major cork triterpenoids. Finally, we analyzed the sequences of QsOSC1-3 and other plant OSCs to identify residues associated with specific OSC activities, then combined this with analyses of Q. suber transcriptomic and genomic data to evaluate potential redundancies in cork triterpenoid biosynthesis.


Subject(s)
Intramolecular Transferases/metabolism , Quercus/metabolism , Triterpenes/metabolism , Biosynthetic Pathways , Computational Biology/methods , Enzyme Activation , Gene Expression Regulation, Enzymologic , Gene Expression Regulation, Plant , Intramolecular Transferases/genetics , Molecular Structure , Quercus/genetics , Structure-Activity Relationship , Triterpenes/chemistry
17.
Plant Biotechnol J ; 18(5): 1185-1199, 2020 05.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31646753

ABSTRACT

Tomato fruit ripening is controlled by the hormone ethylene and by a group of transcription factors, acting upstream of ethylene. During ripening, the linear carotene lycopene accumulates at the expense of cyclic carotenoids. Fruit-specific overexpression of LYCOPENE ß-CYCLASE (LCYb) resulted in increased ß-carotene (provitamin A) content. Unexpectedly, LCYb-overexpressing fruits also exhibited a diverse array of ripening phenotypes, including delayed softening and extended shelf life. These phenotypes were accompanied, at the biochemical level, by an increase in abscisic acid (ABA) content, decreased ethylene production, increased density of cell wall material containing linear pectins with a low degree of methylation, and a thicker cuticle with a higher content of cutin monomers and triterpenoids. The levels of several primary metabolites and phenylpropanoid compounds were also altered in the transgenic fruits, which could be attributed to delayed fruit ripening and/or to ABA. Network correlation analysis and pharmacological experiments with the ABA biosynthesis inhibitor, abamine, indicated that altered ABA levels were a direct effect of the increased ß-carotene content and were in turn responsible for the extended shelf life phenotype. Thus, manipulation of ß-carotene levels results in an improvement not only of the nutritional value of tomato fruits, but also of their shelf life.


Subject(s)
Solanum lycopersicum , Abscisic Acid , Fruit/metabolism , Gene Expression Regulation, Plant , Solanum lycopersicum/genetics , Solanum lycopersicum/metabolism , Plant Proteins/genetics , Plant Proteins/metabolism , beta Carotene
18.
Plant Physiol ; 181(2): 714-728, 2019 10.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31420445

ABSTRACT

Polyacetylenes (PAs) are bioactive, specialized plant defense compounds produced by some species in the eudicot clade campanulids. Early steps of PA biosynthesis are catalyzed by Fatty Acid Desaturase 2 (FAD2). Canonical FAD2s catalyze desaturation, but divergent forms can catalyze hydroxylation, conjugation, acetylenation, and epoxygenation. These alternate reactions give rise to valuable unusual fatty acids, including the precursors to PAs. The extreme functional diversity of FAD2 enzymes and the origin of PA biosynthesis are poorly understood from an evolutionary perspective. We focus here on the evolution of the FAD2 gene family. We uncovered a core eudicot-wide gene duplication event giving rise to two lineages: FAD2-α and FAD2-ß. Independent neofunctionalizations in both lineages have resulted in functionally diverse FAD2-LIKEs involved in unusual fatty acid biosynthesis. We found significantly accelerated rates of molecular evolution in FAD2-LIKEs and use this metric to provide a list of uncharacterized candidates for further exploration of FAD2 functional diversity. FAD2-α has expanded extensively in Asterales and Apiales, two main clades of campanulids, by ancient gene duplications. Here, we detected positive selection in both Asterales and Apiales lineages, which may have enabled the evolution of PA metabolism in campanulids. Together, these findings also imply that yet uncharacterized FAD2-α copies are involved in later steps of PA biosynthesis. This work establishes a robust phylogenetic framework in which to interpret functional data and to direct future research into the origin and evolution of PA metabolism.


Subject(s)
Campanulaceae/genetics , Evolution, Molecular , Fatty Acid Desaturases/genetics , Gene Duplication , Linoleic Acid/biosynthesis , Oleic Acids/biosynthesis , Alkynes , Campanulaceae/metabolism , Multigene Family , Phylogeny , Polyacetylene Polymer/metabolism , Selection, Genetic
19.
Plant Physiol ; 178(4): 1507-1521, 2018 12.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30333150

ABSTRACT

Polyacetylenic lipids accumulate in various Apiaceae species after pathogen attack, suggesting that these compounds are naturally occurring pesticides and potentially valuable resources for crop improvement. These compounds also promote human health and slow tumor growth. Even though polyacetylenic lipids were discovered decades ago, the biosynthetic pathway underlying their production is largely unknown. To begin filling this gap and ultimately enable polyacetylene engineering, we studied polyacetylenes and their biosynthesis in the major Apiaceae crop carrot (Daucus carota subsp. sativus). Using gas chromatography and mass spectrometry, we identified three known polyacetylenes and assigned provisional structures to two novel polyacetylenes. We also quantified these compounds in carrot leaf, petiole, root xylem, root phloem, and root periderm extracts. Falcarindiol and falcarinol predominated and accumulated primarily in the root periderm. Since the multiple double and triple carbon-carbon bonds that distinguish polyacetylenes from ubiquitous fatty acids are often introduced by Δ12 oleic acid desaturase (FAD2)-type enzymes, we mined the carrot genome for FAD2 genes. We identified a FAD2 family with an unprecedented 24 members and analyzed public, tissue-specific carrot RNA-Seq data to identify coexpressed members with root periderm-enhanced expression. Six candidate genes were heterologously expressed individually and in combination in yeast and Arabidopsis (Arabidopsis thaliana), resulting in the identification of one canonical FAD2 that converts oleic to linoleic acid, three divergent FAD2-like acetylenases that convert linoleic into crepenynic acid, and two bifunctional FAD2s with Δ12 and Δ14 desaturase activity that convert crepenynic into the further desaturated dehydrocrepenynic acid, a polyacetylene pathway intermediate. These genes can now be used as a basis for discovering other steps of falcarin-type polyacetylene biosynthesis, to modulate polyacetylene levels in plants, and to test the in planta function of these molecules.


Subject(s)
Daucus carota/genetics , Daucus carota/metabolism , Enzymes/genetics , Plant Proteins/genetics , Polyacetylene Polymer/metabolism , Alkynes/metabolism , Arabidopsis/genetics , Arabidopsis/metabolism , Chromatography, Thin Layer , Diynes/metabolism , Enzymes/metabolism , Fatty Acid Desaturases/genetics , Fatty Acid Desaturases/metabolism , Fatty Alcohols/metabolism , Gas Chromatography-Mass Spectrometry , Linoleic Acid/metabolism , Oleic Acids/metabolism , Plant Proteins/metabolism , Plants, Genetically Modified , Polyacetylene Polymer/analysis , Saccharomyces cerevisiae/genetics
20.
Ann Bot ; 122(4): 555-568, 2018 09 24.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30252045

ABSTRACT

Background and Aims: The cuticular waxes sealing plant surfaces against excessive water loss are complex mixtures of very-long-chain aliphatics, with compositions that vary widely between plant species. To help fill the gap in our knowledge about waxes of non-flowering plant taxa, and thus about the cuticle of ancestral land plants, this study provides comprehensive analyses of waxes on temperate fern species from five different families. Methods: The wax mixtures on fronds of Pteridium aquilinum, Cryptogramma crispa, Polypodium glycyrrhiza, Polystichum munitum and Gymnocarpium dryopteris were analysed using gas chromatography-mass spectrometry for identification, and gas chromatography-flame ionization detection for quantification. Key Results: The wax mixtures from all five fern species contained large amounts of C36-C54 alkyl esters, with species-specific homologue distributions. They were accompanied by minor amounts of fatty acids, primary alcohols, aldehydes and/or alkanes, whose chain length profiles also varied widely between species. In the frond wax of G. dryopteris, C27-C33 secondary alcohols and C27-C35 ketones with functional groups exclusively on even-numbered carbons (C-10 to C-16) were identified; these are characteristic structures similar to secondary alcohols and ketones in moss, gymnosperm and basal angiosperm waxes. The ferns had total wax amounts varying from 3.9 µg cm-2 on P. glycyrrhiza to 16.9 µg cm-2 on G. dryopteris, thus spanning a range comparable with that on leaves of flowering plants. Conclusions: The characteristic compound class compositions indicate that all five fern species contain the full complement of wax biosynthesis enzymes previously described for the angiosperm arabidopsis. Based on the isomer profiles, we predict that each fern species, in contrast to arabidopsis, has multiple ester synthase enzymes, each with unique substrate specificities.


Subject(s)
Ferns/chemistry , Waxes/chemistry , Alcohols/chemistry , Arabidopsis/chemistry , Esters/chemistry , Fatty Acids/chemistry , Gas Chromatography-Mass Spectrometry , Plant Epidermis/chemistry , Plant Leaves/chemistry
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