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Plant Cell


Title:Evolution of Cinnamate/p-coumarate carboxyl methyltransferases and their role in the biosynthesis of methylcinnamate
Author(s):Kapteyn J; Qualley AV; Xie Z; Fridman E; Dudareva N; Gang DR;
Address:"Department of Plant Sciences and BIO5 Institute for Collaborative Bioresearch, University of Arizona, Tucson, Arizona 85721, USA"
Journal Title:Plant Cell
Year:2007
Volume:20071019
Issue:10
Page Number:3212 - 3229
DOI: 10.1105/tpc.107.054155
ISSN/ISBN:1040-4651 (Print) 1532-298X (Electronic) 1040-4651 (Linking)
Abstract:"Methylcinnamate, which is widely distributed throughout the plant kingdom, is a significant component of many floral scents and an important signaling molecule between plants and insects. Comparison of an EST database obtained from the glandular trichomes of a basil (Ocimum basilicum) variety that produces high levels of methylcinnamate (line MC) with other varieties producing little or no methylcinnamate identified several very closely related genes belonging to the SABATH family of carboxyl methyltransferases that are highly and almost exclusively expressed in line MC. Biochemical characterization of the corresponding recombinant proteins showed that cinnamate and p-coumarate are their best substrates for methylation, thus designating these enzymes as cinnamate/p-coumarate carboxyl methyltransferases (CCMTs). Gene expression, enzyme activity, protein profiling, and metabolite content analyses demonstrated that CCMTs are responsible for the formation of methylcinnamate in sweet basil. A phylogenetic analysis of the entire SABATH family placed these CCMTs into a clade that includes indole-3-acetic acid carboxyl methyltransferases and a large number of uncharacterized carboxyl methyltransferase-like proteins from monocots and lower plants. Structural modeling and ligand docking suggested active site residues that appear to contribute to the substrate preference of CCMTs relative to other members of the SABATH family. Site-directed mutagenesis of specific residues confirmed these findings"
Keywords:"Amino Acid Sequence Blotting, Southern Cinnamates/chemistry/*metabolism *Evolution, Molecular Expressed Sequence Tags Gas Chromatography-Mass Spectrometry Gene Expression Profiling Kinetics Methylation Methyltransferases/*genetics/metabolism Models, Molec;"
Notes:"MedlineKapteyn, Jeremy Qualley, Anthony V Xie, Zhengzhi Fridman, Eyal Dudareva, Natalia Gang, David R eng Research Support, U.S. Gov't, Non-P.H.S. England 2007/10/24 Plant Cell. 2007 Oct; 19(10):3212-29. doi: 10.1105/tpc.107.054155. Epub 2007 Oct 19"

 
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