Dirigent protein subfamily function and structure in terrestrial plant phenol metabolism

Aquatic plant transition to land, and subsequent terrestrial plant species diversification, was accompanied by the emergence and massive elaboration of plant phenol chemo-diversity. Concomitantly, dirigent protein (DP) and dirigent-like protein subfamilies, derived from large multigene families, eme...

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Veröffentlicht in:Methods in enzymology 2023, Vol.683, p.101-150
Hauptverfasser: Meng, Qingyan, Kim, Sung-Jin, Costa, Michael A, Moinuddin, Syed G A, Celoy, Rhodesia M, Smith, Clyde A, Cort, John R, Davin, Laurence B, Lewis, Norman G
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container_start_page 101
container_title Methods in enzymology
container_volume 683
creator Meng, Qingyan
Kim, Sung-Jin
Costa, Michael A
Moinuddin, Syed G A
Celoy, Rhodesia M
Smith, Clyde A
Cort, John R
Davin, Laurence B
Lewis, Norman G
description Aquatic plant transition to land, and subsequent terrestrial plant species diversification, was accompanied by the emergence and massive elaboration of plant phenol chemo-diversity. Concomitantly, dirigent protein (DP) and dirigent-like protein subfamilies, derived from large multigene families, emerged and became extensively diversified. DP biochemical functions as gateway entry points into new and diverse plant phenol skeletal types then markedly expanded. DPs have at least eight non-uniformly distributed subfamilies, with different DP subfamily members of known biochemical/physiological function now implicated as gateway entries to lignan, lignin, aromatic diterpenoid, pterocarpan and isoflavene pathways. While some other DP subfamily members have jacalin domains, both these and indeed the majority of DPs throughout the plant kingdom await discovery of their biochemical roles. Methods and approaches were developed to discover DP biochemical function as gateway entry points to distinct plant phenol skeletal types in land plants. Various DP 3D X-ray structural determinations enabled structure-based comparative sequence analysis and modeling to understand similarities and differences among the different DP subfamilies. We consider that the core DP β-barrel fold and associated characteristics are likely common to all DPs, with several residues conserved and nearly invariant. There is also considerable variation in residue composition and topography of the putative substrate binding pockets, as well as substantial differences in several loops, such as the β1-β2 loop. All DPs likely bind and stabilize quinone methide intermediates, while guiding distinctive regio- and/or stereo-chemical entry into Nature's chemo-diverse land plant phenol metabolic classes.
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subjects Phenols - metabolism
Phylogeny
Plant Proteins - chemistry
Plant Proteins - genetics
Plants - genetics
Plants - metabolism
title Dirigent protein subfamily function and structure in terrestrial plant phenol metabolism
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