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A cDNA encoding a stilbene synthase, RtSTS, was isolated from the rhizomes of Tatar rhubarb, Rheum tataricum L. (Polygonaceae), a medicinal plant containing stilbenes and other polyketides. Recombinant RtSTS was expressed in E. coli and assayed with acetyl-coenzyme A (CoA), n-butyryl-CoA, isovaleryl-CoA, n-hexanoyl-CoA, cinnamoyl-CoA and p-coumaroyl-CoA as primers of polyketide synthesis. RtSTS synthesized resveratrol and a trace amount of naringenin chalcone from p-coumaroyl-CoA, supporting the enzyme's identification as a resveratrol-type stilbene synthase (EC 2.3.1.95). Bis-noryangonin and p-coumaroyl triacetic acid lactone (CTAL)-type pyrones were observed in minor amounts in the reaction with p-coumaroyl-CoA and as major products with cinnamoyl CoA. As well, such pyrones, and not aromatic polyketides, were identified as the only products in assays with aliphatic and benzoyl CoA esters. Acetonyl-4-hydroxy-2-pyrone, a pyrone synthesized from acetyl-CoA, was identified as a new product of a stilbene synthase. Using Northern blot analysis, RtSTS transcript was found to be highly expressed in R. tataricum rhizomes, with low transcript levels also present in young leaves. This expression pattern correlated with the occurrence of resveratrol, which was detected in higher amounts in R. tataricum rhizomes compared with leaves and petioles using HPLC. Few stilbene synthases have been found in plants, and the identification of RtSTS provides additional sequence and catalytic information with which to study the evolution of plant polyketide synthases.A cDNA encoding a plant polyketide synthase was isolated from Rheum tataricum and functionally charactarized as a resveratrol-forming stilbene synthase.
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S‐Adenosyl‐l ‐methionine:(R,S )‐reticuline 7‐O‐methyltransferase converts reticuline to laudanine in tetrahydrobenzylisoquinoline biosynthesis in the opium poppy Papaver somniferum . This enzyme activity has not yet been detected in plants. A proteomic analysis of P. somniferum latex identified a gel spot that contained a protein(s) whose partial amino acid sequences were homologous to those of plant O‐methyltransferases. cDNA was amplified from P. somniferum RNA by reverse transcription PCR using primers based on these internal amino acid sequences. Recombinant protein was then expressed in Spodoptera frugiperda Sf9 cells in a baculovirus expression vector. Steady‐state kinetic measurements with one heterologously expressed enzyme and mass spectrometric analysis of the enzymatic products suggested that this unusual enzyme is capable of carrying through sequential O‐methylations on the isoquinoline and on the benzyl moiety of several substrates. The tetrahydrobenzylisoquinolines (R )‐reticuline (4.2 sec−1 mm −1), (S )‐reticuline (4.5 sec−1 mm −1), (R )‐protosinomenine (1.7 sec−1 mm −1), and (R,S )‐isoorientaline (1.4 sec−1 mm −1) as well as guaiacol (5.9 sec−1 mm −1) and isovanillic acid (1.2 sec−1 mm −1) are O‐methylated by the enzyme with the ratio k cat/K m shown in parentheses. A P. somniferum cDNA encoding (R,S )‐norcoclaurine 6‐O‐methyltransferase was similarly isolated and characterized. This enzyme was less permissive, methylating only (R,S )‐norcoclaurine (7.4 sec−1 mm −1), (R )‐norprotosinomenine (4.1 sec−1 mm −1), (S )‐norprotosinomenine (4.0 sec−1 mm −1) and (R,S )‐isoorientaline (1.0 sec−1 mm −1). A phylogenetic comparison of the amino acid sequences of these O‐methyltransferases to those from 28 other plant species suggests that these enzymes group more closely to isoquinoline biosynthetic O‐methyltransferases from Coptis japonica than to those from Thalictrum tuberosum that can O‐methylate both alkaloid and phenylpropanoid substrates.