Changing substrate specificity and iteration of amino acid chain elongation in glucosinolate biosynthesis through targeted mutagenesis of Arabidopsis methylthioalkylmalate synthase1

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Changing substrate specificity and iteration of amino acid chain elongation in glucosinolate biosynthesis through targeted mutagenesis of Arabidopsis methylthioalkylmalate synthase1. / Petersen, Annette; Gram Hansen, Lea; Mirza, Nadia; Crocoll, Christoph; Mirza, Osman Asghar; Halkier, Barbara Ann.

In: Bioscience Reports, Vol. 39, BSR20190446, 07.2019, p. 1-15.

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

Harvard

Petersen, A, Gram Hansen, L, Mirza, N, Crocoll, C, Mirza, OA & Halkier, BA 2019, 'Changing substrate specificity and iteration of amino acid chain elongation in glucosinolate biosynthesis through targeted mutagenesis of Arabidopsis methylthioalkylmalate synthase1', Bioscience Reports, vol. 39, BSR20190446, pp. 1-15. https://doi.org/10.1042/BSR20190446

APA

Petersen, A., Gram Hansen, L., Mirza, N., Crocoll, C., Mirza, O. A., & Halkier, B. A. (2019). Changing substrate specificity and iteration of amino acid chain elongation in glucosinolate biosynthesis through targeted mutagenesis of Arabidopsis methylthioalkylmalate synthase1. Bioscience Reports, 39, 1-15. [BSR20190446]. https://doi.org/10.1042/BSR20190446

Vancouver

Petersen A, Gram Hansen L, Mirza N, Crocoll C, Mirza OA, Halkier BA. Changing substrate specificity and iteration of amino acid chain elongation in glucosinolate biosynthesis through targeted mutagenesis of Arabidopsis methylthioalkylmalate synthase1. Bioscience Reports. 2019 Jul;39:1-15. BSR20190446. https://doi.org/10.1042/BSR20190446

Author

Petersen, Annette ; Gram Hansen, Lea ; Mirza, Nadia ; Crocoll, Christoph ; Mirza, Osman Asghar ; Halkier, Barbara Ann. / Changing substrate specificity and iteration of amino acid chain elongation in glucosinolate biosynthesis through targeted mutagenesis of Arabidopsis methylthioalkylmalate synthase1. In: Bioscience Reports. 2019 ; Vol. 39. pp. 1-15.

Bibtex

@article{cf2f5b194bd540349243721b764ed9f7,
title = "Changing substrate specificity and iteration of amino acid chain elongation in glucosinolate biosynthesis through targeted mutagenesis of Arabidopsis methylthioalkylmalate synthase1",
abstract = "Methylthioalkylmalate synthases catalyse the committing step of amino acid chain elongation in glucosinolate biosynthesis. As such, this group of enzymes plays an important role in determining the glucosinolate composition of Brassicaceae species, including Arabidopsis thaliana Based on protein structure modelling of MAM1 from A. thaliana and analysis of 57 MAM sequences from Brassicaceae species, we identified four polymorphic residues likely to interact with the 2-oxo acid substrate. Through site-directed mutagenesis, the natural variation in these residues and the effect on product composition were investigated. Fifteen MAM1 variants as well as the native MAM1 and MAM3 from A. thaliana were characterised by heterologous expression of the glucosinolate chain elongation pathway in Escherichia coli Detected products derived from leucine, methionine or phenylalanine were elongated with up to six methylene groups. Product profile and accumulation were changed in fourteen of the variants, demonstrating the relevance of the identified residues. The majority of the single amino acid substitutions decreased the length of methionine-derived products, while approximately half of the substitutions increased the phenylalanine-derived products. Combining two substitutions enabled the MAM1 variant to increase the number of elongation rounds of methionine from three to four. Notably, characterisation of the native MAMs indicated that MAM1 and not MAM3 is responsible for homophenylalanine production. This hypothesis was confirmed by glucosinolate analysis in mam1 and mam3 mutants of A. thaliana.",
author = "Annette Petersen and {Gram Hansen}, Lea and Nadia Mirza and Christoph Crocoll and Mirza, {Osman Asghar} and Halkier, {Barbara Ann}",
note = "{\textcopyright}2019 The Author(s).",
year = "2019",
month = jul,
doi = "10.1042/BSR20190446",
language = "English",
volume = "39",
pages = "1--15",
journal = "Bioscience Reports",
issn = "0144-8463",
publisher = "Portland Press Ltd.",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Changing substrate specificity and iteration of amino acid chain elongation in glucosinolate biosynthesis through targeted mutagenesis of Arabidopsis methylthioalkylmalate synthase1

AU - Petersen, Annette

AU - Gram Hansen, Lea

AU - Mirza, Nadia

AU - Crocoll, Christoph

AU - Mirza, Osman Asghar

AU - Halkier, Barbara Ann

N1 - ©2019 The Author(s).

PY - 2019/7

Y1 - 2019/7

N2 - Methylthioalkylmalate synthases catalyse the committing step of amino acid chain elongation in glucosinolate biosynthesis. As such, this group of enzymes plays an important role in determining the glucosinolate composition of Brassicaceae species, including Arabidopsis thaliana Based on protein structure modelling of MAM1 from A. thaliana and analysis of 57 MAM sequences from Brassicaceae species, we identified four polymorphic residues likely to interact with the 2-oxo acid substrate. Through site-directed mutagenesis, the natural variation in these residues and the effect on product composition were investigated. Fifteen MAM1 variants as well as the native MAM1 and MAM3 from A. thaliana were characterised by heterologous expression of the glucosinolate chain elongation pathway in Escherichia coli Detected products derived from leucine, methionine or phenylalanine were elongated with up to six methylene groups. Product profile and accumulation were changed in fourteen of the variants, demonstrating the relevance of the identified residues. The majority of the single amino acid substitutions decreased the length of methionine-derived products, while approximately half of the substitutions increased the phenylalanine-derived products. Combining two substitutions enabled the MAM1 variant to increase the number of elongation rounds of methionine from three to four. Notably, characterisation of the native MAMs indicated that MAM1 and not MAM3 is responsible for homophenylalanine production. This hypothesis was confirmed by glucosinolate analysis in mam1 and mam3 mutants of A. thaliana.

AB - Methylthioalkylmalate synthases catalyse the committing step of amino acid chain elongation in glucosinolate biosynthesis. As such, this group of enzymes plays an important role in determining the glucosinolate composition of Brassicaceae species, including Arabidopsis thaliana Based on protein structure modelling of MAM1 from A. thaliana and analysis of 57 MAM sequences from Brassicaceae species, we identified four polymorphic residues likely to interact with the 2-oxo acid substrate. Through site-directed mutagenesis, the natural variation in these residues and the effect on product composition were investigated. Fifteen MAM1 variants as well as the native MAM1 and MAM3 from A. thaliana were characterised by heterologous expression of the glucosinolate chain elongation pathway in Escherichia coli Detected products derived from leucine, methionine or phenylalanine were elongated with up to six methylene groups. Product profile and accumulation were changed in fourteen of the variants, demonstrating the relevance of the identified residues. The majority of the single amino acid substitutions decreased the length of methionine-derived products, while approximately half of the substitutions increased the phenylalanine-derived products. Combining two substitutions enabled the MAM1 variant to increase the number of elongation rounds of methionine from three to four. Notably, characterisation of the native MAMs indicated that MAM1 and not MAM3 is responsible for homophenylalanine production. This hypothesis was confirmed by glucosinolate analysis in mam1 and mam3 mutants of A. thaliana.

U2 - 10.1042/BSR20190446

DO - 10.1042/BSR20190446

M3 - Journal article

C2 - 31175145

VL - 39

SP - 1

EP - 15

JO - Bioscience Reports

JF - Bioscience Reports

SN - 0144-8463

M1 - BSR20190446

ER -

ID: 222036805