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Publications

Jozwiak, A.; Panda, S.; Akiyama, R.; Yoneda, A.; Umemoto, N.; Saito, K.; Yasumoto, S.; Muranaka, T.; Gharat, S. A.; Kazachkova, Y.; Dong, Y.; Arava, S.; Goliand, I.; Nevo, R.; Rogachev, I.; Meir, S.; Mizutani, M.; Aharoni, A.; A cellulose synthase–like protein governs the biosynthesis of Solanum alkaloids Science 386 eadq5721 (2024) DOI: 10.1126/science.adq5721
  • Abstract
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Decades of research on the infamous antinutritional steroidal glycoalkaloids (SGAs) in Solanaceae plants have provided deep insights into their metabolism and roles. However, engineering SGAs in heterologous hosts has remained a challenge. We discovered that a protein evolved from the machinery involved in building plant cell walls is the crucial link in the biosynthesis of SGAs. We show that cellulose synthase–like M [GLYCOALKALOID METABOLISM15 (GAME15)] functions both as a cholesterol glucuronosyltransferase and a scaffold protein. Silencing GAME15 depletes SGAs, which makes plants more vulnerable to pests. Our findings illuminate plant evolutionary adaptations that balance chemical defense and self-toxicity and open possibilities for producing steroidal compounds in heterologous systems for food, cosmetics, and pharmaceuticals.

Books and chapters

Baseggio Conrado, A.; Capuozzo, E.; Mosca, L.; Francioso, A.; Fontana, M.; Thiotaurine: From Chemical and Biological Properties to Role in H2S Signaling Hu, J., et al., eds. Adv. Exp. Med. Biol. 1155 755-771 (2019) ISBN:978-981-13-8023-5 DOI: 10.1007/978-981-13-8023-5_66
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In the last decade thiotaurine, 2-aminoethane thiosulfonate, has been investigated as an inflammatory modulating agent as a result of its ability to release hydrogen sulfide (H2S) known to play regulatory roles in inflammation. Thiotaurine can be included in the “taurine family” due to structural similarity to taurine and hypotaurine, and is characterized by the presence of a sulfane sulfur moiety. Thiotaurine can be produced by different pathways, such as the spontaneous transsulfuration between thiocysteine – a persulfide analogue of cysteine – and hypotaurine as well as in vivo from cystine. Moreover, the enzymatic oxidation of cysteamine to hypotaurine and thiotaurine in the presence of inorganic sulfur can occur in animal tissues and last but not least thiotaurine can be generated by the transfer of sulfur from mercaptopyruvate to hypotaurine catalyzed by a sulfurtransferase. Thiotaurine is an effective antioxidant agent as demonstrated by its ability to counteract the damage caused by pro-oxidants in the rat. Recently, we observed the influence of thiotaurine on human neutrophils functional responses. In particular, thiotaurine has been found to prevent human neutrophil spontaneous apoptosis suggesting an alternative or additional role to its antioxidant activity. It is likely that the sulfane sulfur of thiotaurine may modulate neutrophil activation via persulfidation of target proteins. In conclusion, thiotaurine can represent a biologically relevant sulfur donor acting as a biological intermediate in the transport, storage and release of sulfide.

Publications

Heidrich, K.; Wirthmueller, L.; Tasset, C.; Pouzet, C.; Deslandes, L.; Parker, J. E.; Arabidopsis EDS1 Connects Pathogen Effector Recognition to Cell Compartment-Specific Immune Responses Science 334 1401-1404 (2011) DOI: 10.1126/science.1211641
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Pathogen effectors are intercepted by plant intracellular nucleotide binding–leucine-rich repeat (NB-LRR) receptors. However, processes linking receptor activation to downstream defenses remain obscure. Nucleo-cytoplasmic basal resistance regulator EDS1 (ENHANCED DISEASE SUSCEPTIBILITY1) is indispensible for immunity mediated by TIR (Toll–interleukin-1 receptor)–NB-LRR receptors. We show that Arabidopsis EDS1 molecularly connects TIR-NB-LRR disease resistance protein RPS4 recognition of bacterial effector AvrRps4 to defense pathways. RPS4-EDS1 and AvrRps4-EDS1 complexes are detected inside nuclei of living tobacco cells after transient coexpression and in Arabidopsis soluble leaf extracts after resistance activation. Forced AvrRps4 localization to the host cytoplasm or nucleus reveals cell compartment–specific RPS4-EDS1 defense branches. Although nuclear processes restrict bacterial growth, programmed cell death and transcriptional resistance reinforcement require nucleo-cytoplasmic coordination. Thus, EDS1 behaves as an effector target and activated TIR-NB-LRR signal transducer for defenses across cell compartments.

Books and chapters

Wessjohann, L. A.; Ostrowski, S.; Bakulev, V.; Berseneva, V.; Bogdanov, A. V.; Romanova, I. P.; Mironov, V. F.; Larionova, O. A.; Shaikhutdinova, G. R.; Sinyashin, O. G.; Baibulatova, N. Z.; Dokichev, V. A.; Fedorova, O. V.; Ovchinnikova, I. G.; Rusinov, G. L.; Titova, J. A.; Nasonova, A.; Kim, D.-J.; Kim, K.-S.; Jang, Y. M.; Kim, S. J.; Rakhimova, E. B.; Minnebaev, A. B.; Akhmetova, V. R.; Qin, C.; Zhang, R.; Wang, Q.; Ren, J.; Tian, L.; Mironov, M. A.; Demina, T. S.; Tcoy, A. M.; Akopova, T. A.; Markvicheva, E. A.; Chernyshenko, A. O.; Zelenetski, A. N.; Pandit, S. S.; Multi-Component Reactions in Supramolecular Chemistry and Material Science Mironov, M. A., ed. Adv. Exp. Med. Biol. 699 173-201 (2011) ISBN:978-1-4419-7270-5 DOI: 10.1007/978-1-4419-7270-5_6
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Multi-component reactions of building blocks with more than one MCR-reactive group will give rise to oligomeric MCR products. The proper choice of at least two bifunctional building blocks will give either a polymeric or a cyclic product. Apart from polymerization, repetitive or consecutive Ugi reactions have been used to produce linear MCR-heterooligomers with such building blocks.

Publications

Gago, S.; Elena, S. F.; Flores, R.; Sanjuan, R.; Extremely High Mutation Rate of a Hammerhead Viroid Science 323 1308-1308 (2009) DOI: 10.1126/science.1169202
  • Abstract
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The mutation rates of viroids, plant pathogens with minimal non-protein-coding RNA genomes, are unknown. Their replication is mediated by host RNA polymerases and, in some cases, by hammerhead ribozymes, small self-cleaving motifs embedded in the viroid. By using the principle that the population frequency of nonviable genotypes equals the mutation rate, we screened for changes that inactivated the hammerheads of Chrysanthemum chlorotic mottle viroid. We obtained a mutation rate of 1/400 per site, the highest reported for any biological entity. Such error-prone replication can only be tolerated by extremely simple genomes such as those of viroids and, presumably, the primitive replicons of the RNA world. Our results suggest that the emergence of replication fidelity was critical for the evolution of complexity in the early history of life.

Books and chapters

Frolov, A.; Singer, D.; Zauner, T.; Hoffmann, R.; Solid Phase Synthesis and Analysis of Amadori Peptides Adv. Exp. Med. Biol. 611 423-424 (2009) ISBN:978-0-387-73657-0 DOI: 10.1007/978-0-387-73657-0_182
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0

Publications

Lipka, V.; Dittgen, J.; Bednarek, P.; Bhat, R.; Wiermer, M.; Stein, M.; Landtag, J.; Brandt, W.; Rosahl, S.; Scheel, D.; Llorente, F.; Molina, A.; Parker, J.; Somerville, S.; Schulze-Lefert, P.; Pre- and Postinvasion Defenses Both Contribute to Nonhost Resistance in Arabidopsis Science 310 1180-1183 (2005) DOI: 10.1126/science.1119409
  • Abstract
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Nonhost resistance describes the immunity of an entire plant species against nonadapted pathogen species. We report that Arabidopsis PEN2 restricts pathogen entry of two ascomycete powdery mildew fungi that in nature colonize grass and pea species. The PEN2 glycosyl hydrolase localizes to peroxisomes and acts as a component of an inducible preinvasion resistance mechanism. Postinvasion fungal growth is blocked by a separate resistance layer requiring the EDS1-PAD4-SAG101 signaling complex, which is known to function in basal and resistance (R) gene–triggered immunity. Concurrent impairment of pre- and postinvasion resistance renders Arabidopsis a host for both nonadapted fungi.

Books and chapters

Mrestani-Klaus, C.; Brandt, W.; Faust, J.; Wrenger, S.; Reinhold, D.; Ansorge, S.; Neubert, K.; New Results on the Conformations of Potent DP IV (CD26) Inhibitors bearing the N-terminal MWP Structural Motif Adv. Exp. Med. Biol. 524 65-68 (2004) DOI: 10.1007/0-306-47920-6_7
  • Abstract
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Conformational analysis by NMR spectroscopy and molecular modeling revealed a left-handed PPII helix-like structure for Trp2-Tat(1–9) (cis and trans) and an even more flexible structure for TXA2-R(1–9).PPII helices form a well-defined structural class comparable with the other structures defined in proteins and are characterized by exposed, mobile structures with 4–8 residues, mostly found on the protein surface. Polyproline II helices are mainly identified by their torsion angles of φ∼−75° and Ψ∼145−. They do not form regular interchain hydrogen bonds, but are hydrogen bonded with water molecules. PPII helices have a strong preference for the amino acid proline, although it is not necessarily present. These features were also reported for the parent peptide Tat(1–9)4 as well as for the well known DP IV substrates neuropeptide Y and pancreatic polypeptide5 suggesting that PPII-like helical structures represent a favored structural class for the interaction with DP IV.Thus, the considerable enhancement of the inhibition capacity of both Trp2-Tat(1–9) and TXA2-R(1–9) compared to the moderate inhibitor Tat(1–9)2, Ki=2.68±0.01 10−4 M, can only be due to tryptophan in the second position suggesting that its side chain is favored to exhibit attractive hydrophobic interactions with DP IV compared with aspartic acid.On the other hand, we could show recently that Tat(1–9) and its analogues as well as TXA2-R(1–9) inhibit DP IV according to different inhibition mechanisms (Lorey et al., manuscript submitted). One possible explanation for these findings might be enzyme-ligand interactions relying on multiple weak binding sites as described for PPII helices5 rather than specific lock and key binding. Certainly, only an X-ray structure of DP IV would help to understand the interaction of DP IV with inhibitors.

Books and chapters

Kühn-Wache, K.; Hoffmann, T.; Manhart, S.; Brandt, W.; Demuth, H.-U.; The Specificity of DP IV for Natural Substrates is Peptide Structure Determined Adv. Exp. Med. Biol. 524 57-63 (2004) DOI: 10.1007/0-306-47920-6_6
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Our results indicate that the substrate properties of peptides are encoded by their own structure. That means, that substrate characteristics depend not only on the primary structure around the catalytic site rather C-terminal located secondary interactions strongly influence the binding and catalysis of the substrates. Such interaction sites seem to force the ligand in a proper orientation to the active site of DP IV. As result of these relations the hydrolysis of peptides with non-proline and non-alanine residues in P1-position (Ser, Val, Gly) becomes possible in longer peptides.Such specific secondary interactions opens the opportunity for development of new inhibitors.

Books and chapters

Wrenger, S.; Reinhold, D.; Faust, J.; Mrestani-Klaus, C.; Brandt, W.; Fengler, A.; Neubert, K.; Ansorge, S.; Effects of Nonapeptides Derived From the N-terminal Structure of Human Immunodeficiency Virus-1 (HIV-1) Tat on Suppression of CD26-Dependent T Cell Growth Adv. Exp. Med. Biol. 477 161-165 (2002) ISBN:978-0-306-46826-1 DOI: 10.1007/0-306-46826-3_18
  • Abstract
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The human immunodeficiency virus-1 (HIV-1) transactivator Tat occurs extracellularly and exerts immunosuppressive effects. Interestingly, Tat inhibits dipeptidyl peptidase IV (DP IV) activity of the T cellactivation marker CD26. The short N-terminal nonapeptideTat(l-9), MDPVDPNIE, also inhibits DP IV activity and suppresses DNA synthesis of tetanus toxoid-stimulated peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMC). Here, we present the influence of amino acid exchanges in the first three positions of Tat(l-9). For instance, the replacement of D2 of Tat(l-9) by G or K generated peptides, which inhibit DP IV-catalyzed IL-2(1-12) cleavage nearly threefold stronger. Similar effects were observed on the suppression of DNA synthesis of Tetanus toxoid-stimulated PBMC. This correlation suggests that Tat(l-9)-deduced peptides mediate antiproliferative effects at least in part via specific DP IV interactions and supports the hypothesis that CD26 plays a key role in the regulation of lymphocyte growth.

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