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Publikation

Fellenberg, C.; Ziegler, J.; Handrick, V.; Vogt, T.; Polyamine homeostasis in wild type and phenolamide deficient Arabidopsis thaliana stamens Front. Plant Sci. 3, 180, (2012) DOI: 10.3389/fpls.2012.00180

Polyamines (PAs) like putrescine, spermidine, and spermine are ubiquitous polycationic molecules that occur in all living cells and have a role in a wide variety of biological processes. High amounts of spermidine conjugated to hydroxycinnamic acids are detected in the tryphine of Arabidopsis thaliana pollen grains. Tapetum localized spermidine hydroxycinnamic acid transferase (SHT) is essential for the biosynthesis of these anther specific tris-conjugated spermidine derivatives. Sht knockout lines show a strong reduction of hydroxycinnamic acid amides (HCAAs). The effect of HCAA-deficient anthers on the level of free PAs was measured by a new sensitive and reproducible method using 9-fluorenylmethyl chloroformate (FMOC) and fluorescence detection by HPLC. PA concentrations can be accurately determined even when very limited amounts of plant material, as in the case of A. thaliana stamens, are available. Analysis of free PAs in wild type stamens compared to sht deficient mutants and transcript levels of key PA biosynthetic genes revealed a highly controlled regulation of PA homeostasis in A. thaliana anthers.
Publikation

Wessjohann, L.; Vogt, T.; Kufka, J.; Klein, R.; Prenyl- und Methyltransferasen in Natur und Synthese BIOspektrum 18, 22-25, (2012) DOI: 10.1007/s12268-012-0137-4

Late stage enzymatic prenylation and methylation are means to diversify (natural) compounds and to specify their functions. In eukaryotes and microbes, these steps are performed by large enzyme families, the prenyl and methyl transferases, which modify various types of small molecules, like isoprenoids, phenolics or alkaloids, but also DNA and proteins. We investigate the theoretical basis of these processes and possible commercial applications in synthetic chemistry.
Publikation

Bektas, I.; Fellenberg, C.; Paulsen, H.; Water-soluble chlorophyll protein (WSCP) of Arabidopsis is expressed in the gynoecium and developing silique Planta 236, 251-259, (2012) DOI: 10.1007/s00425-012-1609-y

Water-soluble chlorophyll protein (WSCP) has been found in many Brassicaceae, most often in leaves. In many cases, its expression is stress-induced, therefore, it is thought to be involved in some stress response. In this work, recombinant WSCP from Arabidopsis thaliana (AtWSCP) is found to form chlorophyll-protein complexes in vitro that share many properties with recombinant or native WSCP from Brassica oleracea, BoWSCP, including an unusual heat resistance up to 100°C in aqueous solution. A polyclonal antibody raised against the recombinant apoprotein is used to identify plant tissues expressing AtWSCP. The only plant organs containing significant amounts of AtWSCP are the gynoecium in open flowers and the septum of developing siliques, specifically the transmission tract. In fully grown but still green siliques, the protein has almost disappeared. Possible implications for AtWSCP functions are discussed.
Publikation

Wirsing, L.; Naumann, K.; Vogt, T.; Arabidopsis methyltransferase fingerprints by affinity-based protein profiling Anal. Biochem. 408, 220-225, (2011) DOI: 10.1016/j.ab.2010.09.029

Precise annotation of time and spatial distribution of enzymes involved in plant secondary metabolism by gel electrophoresis are usually difficult due to their low abundance. Therefore, effective methods to enrich these enzymes are required to correlate available transcript and metabolite data with the actual presence of active enzymes in wild-type and mutant plants or to monitor variations of these enzymes under various types of biotic and abiotic stress conditions. S-Adenosyl-L-methionine-dependent O-methyltransferases play important roles in the modification of natural products such as phenylpropanoids or alkaloids. In plants they occur as small superfamilies with defined roles for each of its members in different organs and tissues. We explored the use of S-adenosyl-L-homocysteine as a selectivity function in affinity-based protein profiling supported by capture compound mass spectrometry. Due to their high affinity to this ligand it was possible to identify developmental changes of flower-specific patterns of plant natural product O-methyltransferases and corroborate the absence of individual O-methyltransferases in the corresponding Arabidopsis knockout lines. Developmental changes in the OMT pattern were correlated with transcript data obtained by qPCR.
Publikation

Wolfram, K.; Schmidt, J.; Wray, V.; Milkowski, C.; Schliemann, W.; Strack, D.; Profiling of phenylpropanoids in transgenic low-sinapine oilseed rape (Brassica napus) Phytochemistry 71, 1076-1084, (2010) DOI: 10.1016/j.phytochem.2010.04.007

A dsRNAi approach silencing a key enzyme of sinapate ester biosynthesis (UDP-glucose:sinapate glucosyltransferase, encoded by the UGT84A9 gene) in oilseed rape (Brassica napus) seeds was performed to reduce the anti-nutritive properties of the seeds by lowering the content of the major seed component sinapine (sinapoylcholine) and various minor sinapate esters. The transgenic seeds have been produced so far to the T6 generation and revealed a steady suppression of sinapate ester accumulation. HPLC analysis of the wild-type and transgenic seeds revealed, as in the previous generations, marked alterations of the sinapate ester pattern of the transformed seeds. Besides strong reduction of the amount of the known sinapate esters, HPLC analysis revealed unexpectedly the appearance of several minor hitherto unknown rapeseed constituents. These compounds were isolated and identified by mass spectrometric and NMR spectroscopic analyses. Structures of 11 components were elucidated to be 4-O-glucosides of syringate, caffeyl alcohol and its 7,8-dihydro derivative as well as of sinapate and sinapine, along with sinapoylated kaempferol glycosides, a hexoside of a cyclic spermidine alkaloid and a sinapine derivative with an ether-bridge to a C6–C3-unit. These results indicate a strong impact of the transgenic approach on the metabolic network of phenylpropanoids in B. napus seeds. Silencing of UGT84A9 gene expression disrupt the metabolic flow through sinapoylglucose and alters the amounts and nature of the phenylpropanoid endproducts.
Publikation

Vogt, T.; Phenylpropanoid Biosynthesis Mol. Plant 3, 2-20, (2010) DOI: 10.1093/mp/ssp106

The general phenylpropanoid metabolism generates an enormous array of secondary metabolites based on the few intermediates of the shikimate pathway as the core unit. The resulting hydroxycinnamic acids and esters are amplified in several cascades by a combination of reductases, oxygenases, and transferases to result in an organ and developmentally specific pattern of metabolites, characteristic for each plant species. During the last decade, methodology driven targeted and non-targeted approaches in several plant species have enabled the identification of the participating enzymes of this complex biosynthetic machinery, and revealed numerous genes, enzymes, and metabolites essential for regulation and compartmentation. Considerable success in structural and computational biology, combined with the analytical sensitivity to detect even trace compounds and smallest changes in the metabolite, transcript, or enzyme pattern, has facilitated progress towards a comprehensive view of the plant response to its biotic and abiotic environment. Transgenic approaches have been used to reveal insights into an apparently redundant gene and enzyme pattern required for functional integrity and plasticity of the various phenylpropanoid biosynthetic pathways. Nevertheless, the function and impact of all members of a gene family remain to be completely established. This review aims to give an update on the various facets of the general phenylpropanoid pathway, which is not only restricted to common lignin or flavonoid biosynthesis, but feeds into a variety of other aromatic metabolites like coumarins, phenolic volatiles, or hydrolyzable tannins.
Publikation

Ehrlich, H.; Hanke, T.; Simon, P.; Born, R.; Fischer, C.; Frolov, A.; Langrock, T.; Hoffmann, R.; Schwarzenbolz, U.; Henle, T.; Bazhenov, V. V.; Worch, H.; Carboxymethylation of the fibrillar collagen with respect to formation of hydroxyapatite J. Biomed. Mater. Res. B 92B, 542-551, (2010) DOI: 10.1002/jbm.b.31551

Control over crystal growth by acidic matrix macromolecules is an important process in the formation of many mineralized tissues. Highly acidic macromolecules are postulated intermediates in tissue mineralization, because they sequester many calcium ions and occur in high concentrations at mineralizing foci in distantly related organisms. A prerequisite for biomineralization is the ability of cations like calcium to bind to proteins and to result in concert with appropriate anions like phosphates or carbonates in composite materials with bone‐like properties. For this mineralization process the proteins have to be modified with respect to acidification. In this study we modified the protein collagen by carboxymethylation using glucuronic acid. Our experiments showed unambigously, that Nε‐carboxymethyllysine is the major product of the in vitro nonenzymatic glycation reaction between glucuronic acid and collagen. We hypothesized that the function of biomimetically carboxymethylated collagen is to increase the local concentration of corresponding ions so that a critical nucleus of ions can be formed, leading to the formation of the mineral. Thus, the self‐organization of HAP nanocrystals on and within collagen fibrils was intensified by carboxymethylation.
Publikation

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.
Publikation

Milkowski, C.; Strack, D.; Sinapate esters in brassicaceous plants: biochemistry, molecular biology, evolution and metabolic engineering Planta 232, 19-35, (2010) DOI: 10.1007/s00425-010-1168-z

Brassicaceous plants are characterized by a pronounced metabolic flux toward sinapate, produced by the shikimate/phenylpropanoid pathway, which is converted into a broad spectrum of O-ester conjugates. The abundant sinapate esters in Brassica napus and Arabidopsis thaliana reflect a well-known metabolic network, including UDP-glucose:sinapate glucosyltransferase (SGT), sinapoylglucose:choline sinapoyltransferase (SCT), sinapoylglucose:l-malate sinapoyltransferase (SMT) and sinapoylcholine (sinapine) esterase (SCE). 1-O-Sinapoylglucose, produced by SGT during seed development, is converted to sinapine by SCT and hydrolyzed by SCE in germinating seeds. The released sinapate feeds via sinapoylglucose into the biosynthesis of sinapoylmalate in the seedlings catalyzed by SMT. Sinapoylmalate is involved in protecting the leaves against the deleterious effects of UV-B radiation. Sinapine might function as storage vehicle for ready supply of choline for phosphatidylcholine biosynthesis in young seedlings. The antinutritive character of sinapine and related sinapate esters hamper the use of the valuable seed protein of the oilseed crop B. napus for animal feed and human nutrition. Due to limited variation in seed sinapine content within the assortment of B. napus cultivars, low sinapine lines cannot be generated by conventional breeding giving rise to genetic engineering of sinapate ester metabolism as a promising means. In this article we review the progress made throughout the last decade in identification of genes involved in sinapate ester metabolism and characterization of the encoded enzymes. Based on gene structures and enzyme recruitment, evolution of sinapate ester metabolism is discussed. Strategies of targeted metabolic engineering, designed to generate low-sinapate ester lines of B. napus, are evaluated.
Publikation

Kopertekh, L.; Schulze, K.; Frolov, A.; Strack, D.; Broer, I.; Schiemann, J.; Cre-mediated seed-specific transgene excision in tobacco Plant Mol. Biol. 72, 597-605, (2010) DOI: 10.1007/s11103-009-9595-6

Here we report the production of marker-free transgenic plants expressing phenolic compounds with high pharmacological value. Our strategy consisted in simultaneous delivery of lox-target and cre-containing constructs into the plant genome by cotransformation. In the Cre-vector, the cre recombinase gene was controlled by a seed-specific napin promoter. In the lox-target construct the selectable bar gene was placed between two lox sites in direct orientation, while a napin promoter driven vstI gene was inserted outside of the lox sites. Upon seed-specific cre induction the bar expression cassette was excised from the tobacco genome. Genetic and molecular analysis of T1 progeny plants indicated DNA excision in all 10 transgenic lines tested. RP-HPLC analysis demonstrated that the expression of the vstI gene resulted in accumulation of trans-resveratrol and its glycosylated derivative piceid in seeds of all marker free lines. These findings indicate that the seed-specific marker gene excision did not interfere with the expression of the gene of interest. Our data demonstrated the feasi of a developmentally controlled cre gene to mediate site-specific excision in tobacco very efficiently.
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