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Publications - Cell and Metabolic Biology

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Publications

Hettwer, K.; Böttcher, C.; Frolov, A.; Mittasch, J.; Albert, A.; von Roepenack-Lahaye, E.; Strack, D.; Milkowski, C.; Dynamic metabolic changes in seeds and seedlings of Brassica napus (oilseed rape) suppressing UGT84A9 reveal plasticity and molecular regulation of the phenylpropanoid pathway Phytochemistry 124, 46-57, (2016) DOI: 10.1016/j.phytochem.2016.01.014

In Brassica napus, suppression of the key biosynthetic enzyme UDP-glucose:sinapic acid glucosyltransferase (UGT84A9) inhibits the biosynthesis of sinapine (sinapoylcholine), the major phenolic component of seeds. Based on the accumulation kinetics of a total of 158 compounds (110 secondary and 48 primary metabolites), we investigated how suppression of the major sink pathway of sinapic acid impacts the metabolome of developing seeds and seedlings. In UGT84A9-suppressing (UGT84A9i) lines massive alterations became evident in late stages of seed development affecting the accumulation levels of 58 secondary and 7 primary metabolites. UGT84A9i seeds were characterized by decreased amounts of various hydroxycinnamic acid (HCA) esters, and increased formation of sinapic and syringic acid glycosides. This indicates glycosylation and β-oxidation as metabolic detoxification strategies to bypass intracellular accumulation of sinapic acid. In addition, a net loss of sinapic acid upon UGT84A9 suppression may point to a feedback regulation of HCA biosynthesis. Surprisingly, suppression of UGT84A9 under control of the seed-specific NAPINC promoter was maintained in cotyledons during the first two weeks of seedling development and associated with a reduced and delayed transformation of sinapine into sinapoylmalate. The lack of sinapoylmalate did not interfere with plant fitness under UV-B stress. Increased UV-B radiation triggered the accumulation of quercetin conjugates whereas the sinapoylmalate level was not affected.
Publications

Bilova, T.; Lukasheva, E.; Brauch, D.; Greifenhagen, U.; Paudel, G.; Tarakhovskaya, E.; Frolova, N.; Mittasch, J.; Balcke, G. U.; Tissier, A.; Osmolovskaya, N.; Vogt, T.; Wessjohann, L. A.; Birkemeyer, C.; Milkowski, C.; Frolov, A.; A Snapshot of the Plant Glycated Proteome: STRUCTURAL, FUNCTIONAL, AND MECHANISTIC ASPECTS J. Biol. Chem. 291, 7621-7636, (2016) DOI: 10.1074/jbc.M115.678581

Glycation is the reaction of carbonyl compounds (reducing sugars and α-dicarbonyls) with amino acids, lipids, and proteins, yielding early and advanced glycation end products (AGEs). The AGEs can be formed via degradation of early glycation intermediates (glycoxidation) and by interaction with the products of monosaccharide autoxidation (autoxidative glycosylation). Although formation of these potentially deleterious compounds is well characterized in animal systems and thermally treated foods, only a little information about advanced glycation in plants is available. Thus, the knowledge of the plant AGE patterns and the underlying pathways of their formation are completely missing. To fill this gap, we describe the AGE-modified proteome of Brassica napus and characterize individual sites of advanced glycation by the methods of liquid chromatography-based bottom-up proteomics. The modification patterns were complex but reproducible: 789 AGE-modified peptides in 772 proteins were detected in two independent experiments. In contrast, only 168 polypeptides contained early glycated lysines, which did not resemble the sites of advanced glycation. Similar observations were made with Arabidopsis thaliana. The absence of the early glycated precursors of the AGE-modified protein residues indicated autoxidative glycosylation, but not glycoxidation, as the major pathway of AGE formation. To prove this assumption and to identify the potential modifying agents, we estimated the reactivity and glycative potential of plant-derived sugars using a model peptide approach and liquid chromatography-mass spectrometry-based techniques. Evaluation of these data sets together with the assessed tissue carbohydrate contents revealed dihydroxyacetone phosphate, glyceraldehyde 3-phosphate, ribulose, erythrose, and sucrose as potential precursors of plant AGEs.
Publications

Mittasch, J.; Mikolajewski, S.; Breuer, F.; Strack, D.; Milkowski, C.; Genomic microstructure and differential expression of the genes encoding UDP-glucose:sinapate glucosyltransferase (UGT84A9) in oilseed rape (Brassica napus) Theor. Appl. Genet. 120, 1485-1500, (2010) DOI: 10.1007/s00122-010-1270-4

In oilseed rape (Brassica napus), the glucosyltransferase UGT84A9 catalyzes the formation of 1-O-sinapoyl-β-glucose, which feeds as acyl donor into a broad range of accumulating sinapate esters, including the major antinutritive seed component sinapoylcholine (sinapine). Since down-regulation of UGT84A9 was highly efficient in decreasing the sinapate ester content, the genes encoding this enzyme were considered as potential targets for molecular breeding of low sinapine oilseed rape. B. napus harbors two distinguishable sequence types of the UGT84A9 gene designated as UGT84A9-1 and UGT84A9-2. UGT84A9-1 is the predominantly expressed variant, which is significantly up-regulated during the seed filling phase, when sinapate ester biosynthesis exhibits strongest activity. In the allotetraploid genome of B. napus, UGT84A9-1 is represented by two loci, one derived from the Brassica C-genome (UGT84A9a) and one from the Brassica A-genome (UGT84A9b). Likewise, for UGT84A9-2 two loci were identified in B. napus originating from both diploid ancestor genomes (UGT84A9c, Brassica C-genome; UGT84A9d, Brassica A-genome). The distinct UGT84A9 loci were genetically mapped to linkage groups N15 (UGT84A9a), N05 (UGT84A9b), N11 (UGT84A9c) and N01 (UGT84A9d). All four UGT84A9 genomic loci from B. napus display a remarkably low micro-collinearity with the homologous genomic region of Arabidopsis thaliana chromosome III, but exhibit a high density of transposon-derived sequence elements. Expression patterns indicate that the orthologous genes UGT84A9a and UGT84A9b should be considered for mutagenesis inactivation to introduce the low sinapine trait into oilseed rape.
Publications

Weier, D.; Mittasch, J.; Strack, D.; Milkowski, C.; The genes BnSCT1 and BnSCT2 from Brassica napus encoding the final enzyme of sinapine biosynthesis: molecular characterization and suppression Planta 227, 375-385, (2008) DOI: 10.1007/s00425-007-0624-x

This study describes the molecular characterization of the genes BnSCT1 and BnSCT2 from oilseed rape (Brassica napus) encoding the enzyme 1-O-sinapoyl-β-glucose:choline sinapoyltransferase (SCT; EC 2.3.1.91). SCT catalyzes the 1-O-β-acetal ester-dependent biosynthesis of sinapoylcholine (sinapine), the most abundant phenolic compound in seeds of B. napus. GUS fusion experiments indicated that seed specificity of BnSCT1 expression is caused by an inducible promoter confining transcription to embryo tissues and the aleurone layer. A dsRNAi construct designed to silence seed-specifically the BnSCT1 gene was effective in reducing the sinapine content of Arabidopsis seeds thus defining SCT genes as targets for molecular breeding of low sinapine cultivars of B. napus. Sequence analyses revealed that in the allotetraploid genome of B. napus the gene BnSCT1 represents the C genome homologue from the B. oleracea progenitor whereas BnSCT2 was derived from the Brassica A genome of B. rapa. The BnSCT1 and BnSCT2 loci showed colinearity with the homologous Arabidopsis SNG2 gene locus although the genomic microstructure revealed the deletion of a cluster of three genes and several coding regions in the B. napus genome.
Publications

Mittasch, J.; Strack, D.; Milkowski, C.; Secondary product glycosyltransferases in seeds of Brassica napus Planta 225, 515-522, (2007) DOI: 10.1007/s00425-006-0360-7

This study describes a systematic screen for secondary product UDP-glycosyltransferases (UGTs; EC 2.4.1) involved in seed development of oilseed rape (Brassica napus) and was aimed at identifying genes related to UGT84A9 encoding UDP-glucose:sinapate glucosyltransferase (EC 2.4.1.120), a proven target for molecular breeding approaches to reduce the content of anti-nutritive sinapate esters. By RT-PCR with primers recognizing the conserved signature motif of UGTs, 13 distinct ESTs could be generated from seed RNA. Sequence analysis allowed to assign the isolated ESTs to groups B, D, E, and L of the UGT family. In an alternative approach, two open reading frames related to UGT84A9 were cloned from the B. napus genome and designated as UGT84A10 and UGT84A11, respectively. Functional expression of UGT84A10 revealed that the encoded enzyme catalyzes the formation of 1-O-acylglucosides (β-acetal esters) with several hydroxycinnamates whereas, in our hands, the recombinant UGT84A11 did not display this enzymatic activity. Semi-quantitative RT-PCR confirmed that the majority of potential UGTs specified by the isolated ESTs is differentially expressed. A pronounced transcriptional up-regulation during seed development was evident for UGT84A9 and one EST (BnGT3) clustering in group E of UGTs. UGT84A10 was highly induced in flowers and expressed to a moderate level in late seed maturation indicating a possible involvement in seed-specific sinapate ester biosynthesis.
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