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A short survey of historic and current methods for the synthesis of selenocysteine, selenocystine, and derivatives and related compounds is presented, with an additional emphasis on the formation of selenocysteine‐derived SeS bridges. The majority of methods to the amino acid starts with protected and O ‐activated serine, but also other concepts are included such as radical or multicomponent strategies, the latter allowing also direct access to peptoids in one pot. Of special importance is the monomeric oxidative cyclization of selenocysteine–cysteine peptides to eight‐membered and larger rings with a selenenylsulfide bridge, a crucial element in several selenoproteins.
Publications
Takai–Utimoto reactions with secondary and tertiary aliphatic halides usually failed according to previous reports. Now, significant improvements could be achieved, and especially secondary aliphatic halides can be coupled to aromatic aldehydes in yields of up to >95%. A variety of processes are competing with the desired one, and thus conditions must be adapted to the nature of the aldehyde as well as the aliphatic halide used, as the outcome of these reactions is strongly affected by the putative radical intermediates.
Publications
In alcohols and esters, a neighbouring dialkylamino group can enhance the reactivity towards acylation and deacylation, respectively, that is, such amino alcohols can act as transacylation catalysts like DMAP. This effect is dependent on the number of (carbon) spacer atoms, flexibility of the molecule and the presence and position of further heteroatoms. Based on this effect, the site selective acylation and deacylation of desmycosin, a macrocycle antibiotic possessing an amino sugar moiety, is described.
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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
For the first time a member of the CYP74 enzyme subfamily (9‐AOS) from tomato has been shown by chemical and analytical approaches to catalyze multiple reactions. These multifunctional properties of 9‐AOS from the oxylipin‐forming lipoxygenase (LOX) pathway raise several new questions on lipid‐derived signaling.
Publications
The plant life cycle includes diploid sporophytic and haploid gametophytic generations. Female gametophytes (embryo sacs) in higher plants are embedded in specialized sporophytic structures (ovules). Here, we report that two closely related mitogen-activated protein kinases in Arabidopsis thaliana, MPK3 and MPK6, share a novel function in ovule development: in the MPK6 mutant background, MPK3 is haplo-insufficient, giving female sterility when heterozygous. By contrast, in the MPK3 mutant background, MPK6 does not show haplo-insufficiency. Using wounding treatment, we discovered gene dosage–dependent activation of MPK3 and MPK6. In addition, MPK6 activation is enhanced when MPK3 is null, which may help explain why mpk3−/− mpk6+/− plants are fertile. Genetic analysis revealed that the female sterility of mpk3+/− mpk6−/− plants is a sporophytic effect. In mpk3+/− mpk6−/− mutant plants, megasporogenesis and megagametogenesis are normal and the female gametophyte identity is correctly established. Further analysis demonstrates that the mpk3+/− mpk6−/− ovules have abnormal integument development with arrested cell divisions at later stages. The mutant integuments fail to accommodate the developing embryo sac, resulting in the embryo sacs being physically restricted and female reproductive failure. Our results highlight an essential function of MPK3 and MPK6 in promoting cell division in the integument specifically during ovule development.
Books and chapters
With the successful application of molecular genetic methods to the plant alkaloid field, we now have sophisticated tools at our disposal to study regulation of enzymatic biosynthesis, as well as determining the cellular and subcellular localization of these enzymes. The availability of ever‐increasing numbers of recombinant enzymes has enabled thorough analyses of selected alkaloid biosynthetic enzymes at the biochemical and structural levels. We are just beginning to use this knowledge to metabolically engineer alkaloid metabolism in plants and in in vitro cultures. Multicellular compartmentation of alkaloid pathways must be considered if meaningful metabolic engineering experiments are to be designed; for example, we will need to use promoters that drive transgene expression in the correct cell types. Regulation of these pathways at the gene and enzyme level is complex and there is still much to be learned about metabolite levels, multienzyme complexes, and pathway interconnections, as we systematically overexpress and suppress gene transcription. Today, pathway engineering in plants remains highly variable. When we perturb cellular physiology, metabolite homeostasis and intra‐ and intercellular partitioning can be affected in unpredictable ways. Predictive metabolic engineering to generate plants with tailored alkaloid profiles for basic research and for commercial production is clearly a challenge for the future.