Characterization in vitro and in vivo of the putative multigene 4-coumarate:CoA ligase network in Arabidopsis: syringyl lignin and sinapate/sinapyl alcohol derivative formation
Detailed characterization of all bona fide At4CL genes, and their corresponding recombinant proteins, together with that of an At4CL5 gene knockout, revealed that formation of syringyl lignin and sinapate ester does not occur via direct ligation of sinapic acid. A recent in silico analysis revealed...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Phytochemistry 2005-09, Vol.66 (17), p.2072-2091 |
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Zusammenfassung: | Detailed characterization of all bona fide
At4CL genes, and their corresponding recombinant proteins, together with that of an
At4CL5 gene knockout, revealed that formation of syringyl lignin and sinapate ester does not occur via direct ligation of sinapic acid.
A recent in silico analysis revealed that the
Arabidopsis genome has 14 genes annotated as putative 4-coumarate:CoA ligase isoforms or homologues. Of these, 11 were selected for detailed functional analysis in vitro, using all known possible phenylpropanoid pathway intermediates (
p-coumaric, caffeic, ferulic, 5-hydroxyferulic and sinapic acids), as well as cinnamic acid. Of the 11 recombinant proteins so obtained, four were catalytically active in vitro, with fairly broad substrate specificities, confirming that the
4CL gene family in
Arabidopsis has only four members. This finding is in agreement with our previous phylogenetic analyses, and again illustrates the need for comprehensive characterization of all putative 4CLs, rather than piecemeal analysis of selected gene members. All 11 proteins were expressed with a C-terminal His
6-tag and functionally characterized, with one, At4CL1, expressed in native form for kinetic property comparisons.
Of the 11 putative His
6-tagged 4CLs, isoform At4CL1 best utilized
p-coumaric, caffeic, ferulic and 5-hydroxyferulic acids as substrates, whereas At4CL2 readily transformed
p-coumaric and caffeic acids into the corresponding CoA esters, while ferulic and 5-hydroxyferulic acids were converted quite poorly. At4CL3 also displayed broad substrate specificity efficiently converting
p-coumaric, caffeic and ferulic acids into their CoA esters, whereas 5-hydroxyferulic acid was not as effectively utilized. By contrast, while At4CL5 is the only isoform capable of ligating sinapic acid, the two preferred substrates were 5-hydroxyferulic and caffeic acids. Indeed, both At4CL1 and At4CL5 most effectively utilized 5-hydroxyferulic acid with
k
enz
∼
10-fold higher than that for At4CL2 and At4CL3.
The remaining seven 4CL-like homologues had no measurable catalytic activity (at ∼100
μg protein concentrations), again bringing into sharp focus both the advantages to, and the limitations of, current database annotations, and the need to unambiguously demonstrate true enzyme function.
Lastly, although At4CL5 is able to convert both 5-hydroxyferulic and sinapic acids into the corresponding CoA esters, the physiological significance of the latter observation in vitro was in ques |
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ISSN: | 0031-9422 1873-3700 |
DOI: | 10.1016/j.phytochem.2005.06.022 |