The regulatory role of shikimate in plant phenylalanine metabolism

•We propose a control mechanism, which we call a “precursor shutoff valve,” to explain how plants prioritize primary metabolism when input is low, but allow a large flux into secondary metabolism when input is high.•The seemingly redundant involvement of shikimate in the monolignol pathway may regul...

Ausführliche Beschreibung

Gespeichert in:
Bibliographische Detailangaben
Veröffentlicht in:Journal of theoretical biology 2019-02, Vol.462, p.158-170
Hauptverfasser: Adams, Z.P., Ehlting, J., Edwards, R.
Format: Artikel
Sprache:eng
Schlagworte:
Online-Zugang:Volltext
Tags: Tag hinzufügen
Keine Tags, Fügen Sie den ersten Tag hinzu!
Beschreibung
Zusammenfassung:•We propose a control mechanism, which we call a “precursor shutoff valve,” to explain how plants prioritize primary metabolism when input is low, but allow a large flux into secondary metabolism when input is high.•The seemingly redundant involvement of shikimate in the monolignol pathway may regulate the rate of lignin biosynthesis when phenylalanine availability is limiting.•Lowering the rate of shikimate biosynthesis in the plastid has a greater effect on monolignol biosynthesis than it does on protein biosynthesis.•The connectivity of plant metabolic networks can effect their regulation on much faster time scales than regulation at the transcriptional or post-translational levels. In higher plants, the amino acid phenylalanine is a substrate of both primary and secondary metabolic pathways. The primary pathway that consumes phenylalanine, protein biosynthesis, is essential for the viability of all cells. Meanwhile, the secondary pathways are not necessary for the survival of individual cells, but benefit of the plant as a whole. Here we focus on the monolignol pathway, a secondary metabolic pathway in the cytosol that rapidly consumes phenylalanine to produce the precursors of lignin during wood formation. In planta monolignol biosynthesis involves a series of seemingly redundant steps wherein shikimate, a precursor of phenylalanine synthesized in the plastid, is transiently ligated to the main substrate of the pathway. However, shikimate is not catalytically involved in the reactions of the monolignol pathway, and is only needed for pathway enzymes to recognize their main substrates. After some steps the shikimate moiety is removed unaltered, and the main substrate continues along the pathway. It has been suggested that this portion of the monolignol pathway fulfills a regulatory role in the following way. Low phenylalanine concentrations (viz. availability) correlate with low shikimate concentrations. When shikimate concentratios are low, flux into the monolignol pathway will be limited by means of the steps requiring shikimate. Thus, when the concentration of phenylalanine is low it will be reserved for protein biosynthesis. Here we employ a theoretical approach to test this hypothesis. Simplified versions of plant phenylalanine metabolism are modelled as systems of ordinary differential equations. Our analysis shows that the seemingly redundant steps can be sufficient for the prioritization of protein biosynthesis over the monolignol pathway when
ISSN:0022-5193
1095-8541
DOI:10.1016/j.jtbi.2018.11.005