| Literature DB >> 35302160 |
Anna Jo Muhich1,2, Amanda Agosto-Ramos1,2, Daniel J Kliebenstein1,2,3.
Abstract
Plants produce a broad variety of specialized metabolites with distinct biological activities and potential applications. Despite this potential, most biosynthetic pathways governing specialized metabolite production remain largely unresolved across the plant kingdom. The rapid advancement of genetics and biochemical tools has enhanced our ability to identify plant specialized metabolic pathways. Further advancements in transgenic technology and synthetic biology approaches have extended this to a desire to design new pathways or move existing pathways into new systems to address long-running difficulties in crop systems. This includes improving abiotic and biotic stress resistance, boosting nutritional content, etc. In this review, we assess the potential and limitations for (1) identifying specialized metabolic pathways in plants with multi-omics tools and (2) using these enzymes in synthetic biology or crop engineering. The goal of these topics is to highlight areas of research that may need further investment to enhance the successful application of synthetic biology for exploiting the myriad of specialized metabolic pathways.Entities:
Keywords: engineering; integration; plants; specialized metabolism; synthetic biology
Mesh:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35302160 PMCID: PMC9023015 DOI: 10.1042/ETLS20210248
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Emerg Top Life Sci ISSN: 2397-8554
Figure 1.A simplified glucosinolate biosynthetic pathway illustrating the power and limitations of integrated transcriptomics and metabolomics for identifying specialized metabolic pathways.
The simplified pathway uses tryptophan as a precursor and generates two stable glucosinolate products using several genes and enzymes. Enzymes A and B are directly involved in the production of the first stable product. Enzyme C must be activated by Enzyme D (a kinase) before it can also contribute to the pathway. As a result, Genes A, B, and C are detected in the co-expression network, but Gene C* is not detected because the enzyme isn't generated directly from a transcript. Gene D encoding the kinase may also not be reliably detected in the co-expression network. Enzyme E is directly involved in a final functional modification of stable product 1 to form stable product 2, so it also may not reliably co-express at the same time as the other biosynthetic genes. Metabolic profiles reveal both stable glucosinolate products in addition to the precursor molecule.
Figure 2.Simplified aliphatic glucosinolate pathway connectedness to other biochemical and signaling pathways.
Aliphatic glucosinolates’ side chain is methionine derived which is synthesized by the formation of cysteine from 3-PG4 with serine as an intermediate. Within this pathway, the intermediate methionine can allosterically regulate the enzyme PGDH which controls the entry point to the phosphorylated pathway of serine biosynthesis. Methionine also produces S-adenosylmethionine which serves as precursor to both ethylene and polyamines biosynthesis. Methionine gives rise to various glucosinolates, of which some have been observed to be catabolized to cysteine in low sulfur concentrations.