| Literature DB >> 25578278 |
Jennifer Munkert1, Jacob Pollier2, Karel Miettinen3, Alex Van Moerkercke2, Richard Payne4, Frieder Müller-Uri1, Vincent Burlat5, Sarah E O'Connor4, Johan Memelink3, Wolfgang Kreis6, Alain Goossens7.
Abstract
Catharanthus roseus, the Madagascar periwinkle, synthesizes bioactive monoterpenoid indole alkaloids, including the anti-cancer drugs vinblastine and vincristine. The monoterpenoid branch of the alkaloid pathway leads to the secoiridoid secologanin and involves the enzyme iridoid synthase (IS), a member of the progesterone 5β-reductase (P5βR) family. IS reduces 8-oxogeranial to iridodial. Through transcriptome mining, we show that IS belongs to a family of six C. roseus P5βR genes. Characterization of recombinant CrP5βR proteins demonstrates that all but CrP5βR3 can reduce progesterone and thus can be classified as P5βRs. Three of them, namely CrP5βR1, CrP5βR2, and CrP5βR4, can also reduce 8-oxogeranial, pointing to a possible redundancy with IS (corresponding to CrP5βR5) in secoiridoid synthesis. In-depth functional analysis by subcellular protein localization, gene expression analysis, in situ hybridization, and virus-induced gene silencing indicate that besides IS, CrP5βR4 may also participate in secoiridoid biosynthesis. We cloned a set of P5βR genes from angiosperm plant species not known to produce iridoids and demonstrate that the corresponding recombinant proteins are also capable of using 8-oxogeranial as a substrate. This suggests that IS activity is intrinsic to angiosperm P5βR proteins and has evolved early during evolution.Entities:
Keywords: Catharanthus roseus; Medicago truncatula; VEP1-encoded enone-reductases; monoterpenoid indole alkaloid; progesterone reductase; secoiridoid
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Year: 2014 PMID: 25578278 DOI: 10.1016/j.molp.2014.11.005
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Mol Plant ISSN: 1674-2052 Impact factor: 21.949