Abstract
Phenylalanine is a vital component of proteins in all living organisms, and in plants is a precursor for thousands of additional metabolites. Animals are incapable of synthesizing phenylalanine and must primarily obtain it directly or indirectly from plants. Although plants can synthesize phenylalanine in plastids through arogenate, the contribution of an alternative pathway via phenylpyruvate, as occurs in most microbes, has not been demonstrated. Here we show that plants also utilize a microbial-like phenylpyruvate pathway to produce phenylalanine, and flux through this route is increased when the entry point to the arogenate pathway is limiting. Unexpectedly, we find the plant phenylpyruvate pathway utilizes a cytosolic aminotransferase that links the coordinated catabolism of tyrosine to serve as the amino donor, thus interconnecting the extra-plastidial metabolism of these amino acids. This discovery uncovers another level of complexity in the plant aromatic amino acid regulatory network, unveiling new targets for metabolic engineering.
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Introduction
Aromatic amino acids are essential constituents of proteins in all living organisms, whereas in plants, phenylalanine (Phe) and tyrosine (Tyr) also serve as precursors for thousands of vital and specialized compounds. Approximately 20â30% of photosynthetically fixed carbon is directed towards synthesis of phenylalanine, and in turn to lignin1, the central structural component of plant cell walls and the major impediment to cellulosic biofuel production. In addition to structural roles, phenylalanine-derived compounds function in plant defence and ultraviolet protection (for example, flavonoids and various phenolics)2,3, signalling (for example, isoflavonoids)4 and reproduction (for example, anthocyanins and phenylpropanoid/benzenoid volatiles)3. Moreover, tyrosine-derived metabolites, such as tocopherols (vitamin E)5, plastoquinone6, cyanogenic glycosides7 and suberin8 have crucial roles in plant fitness.
Phenylalanine and tyrosine are synthesized from chorismate, the final product of the shikimate pathway9,10, which is converted by chorismate mutase to prephenate. Subsequent conversion of prephenate to phenylalanine and tyrosine occurs through alternative routes. In the first (the arogenate pathway), a shared transamination reaction catalysed by prephenate aminotransferase (PPA-AT), produces L-arogenate, which can then either be dehydrated/decarboxylated to phenylalanine by arogenate dehydratase (ADT) or dehydrogenated/decarboxyled to tyrosine by arogenate dehydrogenase (ADH; Fig. 1). In the other routes (the phenylpyruvate/4-hydroxyphenylpyruvate pathways), these reactions occur in reverse order: prephenate is first subjected to dehydration/decarboxylation or dehydrogenation/decarboxylation to form phenylpyruvate or 4-hydroxyphenylpyruvate, respectively. Then the corresponding products undergo transamination to phenylalanine and tyrosine (Fig. 1). Most microorganisms appear to utilize only the phenylpyruvate/4-hydroxyphenylpyruvate pathways11,12,13, with a few exceptions14. In contrast, phenylalanine and tyrosine biosynthesis in plants has only been described to occur via the arogenate pathway15,16,17,18. Nevertheless, overexpression of a bacterial bifunctional chorismate mutase/prephenate dehydratase (PheA) in Arabidopsis resulted in significantly increased phenylalanine production19, implicating the presence of an aminotransferase capable of converting phenylpyruvate to phenylalanine in plants, as it occurs in the final step of the microbial phenylpyruvate pathway. Although several plant aminotransferases, mainly participating in aromatic amino-acid catabolism, have recently been described20,21,22,23, none of them have been demonstrated to function in phenylalanine biosynthesis.
Previously we demonstrated that PhADT1 downregulation in Petunia hybrida flowers, which emit high levels of phenylalanine-derived volatiles24,25, resulted in a greater decrease in phenylalanine levels compared with the effect of PhPPA-AT downregulation (up to 82% versus 20% reduction, respectively)16,17. Such a differential impact on phenylalanine levels from the downregulation of these individual genes was suggested to be due to either sufficient residual PPA-AT activity in the PhPPA-AT RNAi lines capable of sustaining the arogenate pathway, or the redirection of carbon flux from accumulated prephenate in the PhPPA-AT RNAi lines through the hitherto undetected alternative phenylpyruvate pathway17.
Here to test these hypotheses, we generated RNAi transgenic petunia plants in which both PhADT1 and PhPPA-AT genes were simultaneously downregulated. If the phenylalanine and volatile phenotypes in PhADT1 plants can be rescued by concurrent downregulation of PhPPA-AT, this would be consistent with redirection of flux from prephenate through an alternative pathway. Indeed, detailed metabolic profiling of PhADT1xPhPPA-AT RNAi lines provides evidence in agreement with the involvement of an alternative pathway. To provide further support, we identify a petunia phenylpyruvate aminotransferase gene (designated as PhPPY-AT), downregulation of which leads to reduction of phenylalanine and phenylalanine-derived scent compounds. Extensive biochemical characterization of PhPPY-AT reveals that it preferentially converts phenylpyruvate to phenylalanine, and unexpectedly strongly favours tyrosine as the amino donor. In addition, feeding experiments with petunia petals show that the 15N label from supplied 15N-tyrosine is retrieved in phenylalanine, and higher phenylalanine labelling occurs in PhADT1xPhPPA-AT RNAi lines than in wild-type, consistent with higher flux through the phenylpyruvate pathway when the flux into the arogenate pathway is limiting. Moreover, we have shown that PhPPY-AT is a cytosolic enzyme, and when the tyrosine pool is reduced via overexpression of a cytosolic tyrosine decarboxylase, it leads to a decrease in phenylalanine levels. Taken together, these results demonstrate for the first time that the microbial-like phenylpyruvate pathway operates in plants, phenylalanine biosynthesis is not limited to plastids, and that there is an interconnection between aromatic amino-acid catabolism and biosynthesis in planta.
Results
PhPPA-AT suppression in PhADT1 RNAi lines rescues Phe levels
To determine if phenylpyruvate can serve as an intermediate in phenylalanine biosynthesis in petunia, 2 days old wild-type flowers were fed with 10âmM L-[ring-2H5]-phenylpyruvate for 6âh during the night. Indeed, time-of-flight (TOF) Liquid chromatography-mass spectrometry (LC-MS) analysis revealed that phenylalanine was labelled up to 9%. Next, to examine the contribution of the undiscovered phenylpyruvate pathway towards phenylalanine biosynthesis in petunia flowers, PhADT1 and PhPPA-AT RNAi lines were crossed to simultaneously downregulate both steps in the arogenate pathway. Five independent lines (AâE) were generated and found to display comparable degrees of PhADT1 and PhPPA-AT mRNA suppression to those in the parental lines (Fig. 2a,b). Phenylalanine levels in all five PhADT1xPhPPA-AT RNAi lines were rescued, not just to PhPPA-AT RNAi levels, but surprisingly to that of wild-type (Fig. 2c), consistent with the hypothesized redirection of flux through an alternative pathway. One independent line (A) was selected for further biochemical analysis and metabolic profiling of emitted floral volatiles as well as internal pools of intermediates and end products. Similar to expression levels, ADT and PPA-AT activities, in the flowers of the PhADT1xPhPPA-AT RNAi line A resembled the parents, while metabolic profiling revealed that similar to the PhPPA-AT RNAi line, prephenate and arogenate accumulated, while tyrosine, tryptophan, and shikimate levels matched the wild type (Supplementary Fig. S1). Moreover, like phenylalanine levels, phenylalanine-derived volatiles were rescued to those of wild type (Fig. 2c, Supplementary Fig. S1 and Supplementary Table S1). Feeding petunia petals from PhADT1xPhPPA-AT RNAi flowers with 10âmM 2H5-phenylpyruvate resulted in labelling of the phenylalanine pool by 24% (2.7-fold higher than wild type), further supporting the hypothesized increased flux through an alternative pathway when the arogenate route is limiting.
PhPPY-AT prefers phenylpyruvate and Tyr as substrates
Although most microorganisms utilize the phenylpyruvate route to synthesize phenylalanine11,12,13, they rely on multiple functionally redundant aminotransferases with broad substrate specificity to convert phenylpyruvate to phenylalanine26. As aminotransferase reactions are reversible in nature, we therefore used the Cucumis melo L., Cucurbitaceae enzyme CmArAT1 (ADC45389.1), which catalyses the catabolism of phenylalanine to phenylpyruvate for production of melon fruit scent compounds20, as query for a tBlastn search against our petunia RNA-seq database to identify a candidate phenylpyruvate aminotransferase (PPY-AT). The top hit in the tBLASTn search (E-value <eâ170) revealed a contig representing a full-length mRNA encoding a protein, later designated as the PhPPY-AT, of 447 amino acids sharing 66% identity/82% similarity to CmArAT1. To examine if PhPPY-AT is capable of converting phenylpyruvate to phenylalanine, we initially assessed its ability to functionally complement the Escherichia coli (E. coli) phenylalanine auxotrophic mutant DL39 (ref. 27). This mutant lacks the three aminotransferases, AspC (aspartate aminotransferase), TyrB (L-Tyrosine aminotransferase) and IlvE (branched-chain aminotransferase), shown to participate in phenylalanine and tyrosine biosynthesis. The PhPPY-AT open reading frame, subcloned in the arabinose-inducible vector pBad33 (ref. 28) and introduced into the DL39 mutant, restored the ability of the mutant to grow in the absence of exogenously supplied phenylalanine and tyrosine (Supplementary Fig. S2a). Moreover, in vitro enzyme assays using crude extracts from the DL39 mutant expressing PhPPY-AT in the presence of phenylpyruvate, glutamate as an amino donor and the pyridoxal phosphate cofactor, confirmed that PhPPY-AT transaminates phenylpyruvate to phenylalanine (Supplementary Fig. S2b).
For biochemical characterization of the isolated PhPPY-AT, its coding region was expressed in E. coli as an inducible fusion protein containing a hexahistidine tag, which was subsequently removed before analysis. Out of the 19 common L-amino acids (except phenylalanine, the product of the reaction) tested as amino donors, tyrosine by far most efficiently supplied the amino group for the conversion of phenylpyruvate to phenylalanine, whereas PPY-AT activities with glutamate, methionine and leucine did not exceed 13% of the activity with tyrosine (Supplementary Table S2). Of the five keto acids tested in the presence of tyrosine, only phenylpyruvate and α-ketoglutarate effectively served as substrates, and no activity was detected with prephenate (Supplementary Table S3), the substrate of PhPPA-AT17. Similarly, with glutamate as the amino donor, phenylpyruvate was the best substrate and again no activity was detected with prephenate (Supplementary Table S3), indicating that PhPPY-AT does not moonlight in the arogenate pathway. Apparent Km values of PhPPY-AT for phenylpyruvate were 1.5 and 2.6âmM when tested with tyrosine and glutamate, respectively, as amino donors, whereas Km values for tyrosine and glutamate in the presence of phenylpyruvate were 1.9 and 11.1âmM, respectively (Table 1). Catalytic efficiencies (kcat/Km) for phenylpyruvate and tyrosine were comparable (0.965 and 0.769âmMâ1âsâ1) when used together. However, when tyrosine was substituted by glutamate the catalytic efficiency of PhPPY-AT for phenylpyruvate was reduced by half (0.461âmMâ1âsâ1), and that for the amino donor (glutamate) was reduced by 20-fold (0.039âmMâ1âsâ1; Table 1).
PhPPY-AT also catalysed the reverse reactions, conversion of phenylalanine to phenylpyruvate using 4-hydroxyphenylpyruvate or α-ketoglutarate as amino acceptors (Table 1). The forward and reverse reactions with glutamate and α-ketoglutarate, respectively, occurred with similar catalytic efficiencies (Table 1). However, catalytic efficiencies of the reverse reaction using 4-hydroxyphenylpyruvate and phenylalanine as substrates (0.089 and 0.039âmMâ1âsâ1, respectively) were 11- and 20-fold lower than that in the forward reaction for phenylpyruvate (0.965âmMâ1âsâ1) and tyrosine (0.769âmMâ1âsâ1), respectively (Table 1). As the reverse reaction with 4-hydroxyphenylpyruvate leads to tyrosine formation, we checked whether phenylalanine is the best amino donor. Indeed, phenylalanine showed the highest activity with 4-hydroxyphenylpyruvate as amino acceptor, although glutamate, methionine and leucine displayed comparable activities (Supplementary Table S2).
PhPPY-AT is localized in the cytosol
In plants phenylalanine biosynthesis via the arogenate pathway takes place in plastids10,16,18,29,30. Surprisingly however, the protein targeting prediction programs (WolfPSort: http://wolfpsort.org/31; Predotar: http://urgi.versailles.inra.fr/predotar/predotar.html32; TargetP: http://www.cbs.dtu.dk/services/TargetP/33) revealed the absence of an N-terminal transit peptide for plastidic localization in the PhPPY-AT protein. To experimentally determine PhPPY-AT subcellular localization, the complete coding region of the gene was fused to either the 5â²- or 3â²-ends of a green fluorescent protein (GFP) reporter gene. The resulting constructs were transferred to Arabidopsis protoplasts and the corresponding transient GFP expression was analysed by confocal microscopy (Fig. 3). Independent of PhPPY-AT position, GFP fluorescence was detected only in the cytosol (Fig. 3a,b), similar to protoplasts expressing GFP alone (Fig. 3c), and did not overlap with autofluorescence of chloroplasts or GFP fused to the transit peptide of ribulose-1,5-bis-phosphate carboxylase/oxigenase (Rubisco) small subunit (Fig. 3d). To biochemically confirm the cytosolic localization of PhPPY-AT, its activity was assayed in cytosolic and plastidial fractions prepared from wild-type petunia petals34,35 (Table 2). Indeed, the cytosolic fraction showed 2.5-fold enrichment in PhPPY-AT activity, similar to the 2.6-fold enrichment in the activity of the cytosolic marker alcohol dehydrogenase, relative to crude extract. At the same time, no enrichment in activity of the plastidic marker, PPA-AT, was detected in this fraction (Table 2). In contrast, no PhPPY-AT nor alcohol dehydrogenase activities were detected in the plastidic fraction, which exhibited a 3-fold enrichment in PPA-AT activity compared with crude extract (Table 2). Taken together these results demonstrate that PhPPY-AT is localized in the cytosol, not in plastids.
PhPPY-AT is involved in Phe biosynthesis in vivo
Genes involved in biosynthesis of phenylalanine and phenylalanine-derived volatile compounds in petunia flowers typically display a spatial, temporal and rhythmic expression profile corresponding with floral volatile emission16,17,25,34,35,36. Thus, PhPPY-AT transcript levels were investigated by qRTâPCR with gene-specific primers. Although PhPPY-AT expression did not show a specific spatial profile or change over flower development, it did exhibit rhythmicity with maximum around 15:00âh, positively correlating with phenylalanine levels16 and emission of phenylalanine-derived volatiles24,25 over a daily light/dark cycle (Supplementary Fig. S3).
To further determine whether PhPPY-AT is involved in phenylalanine biosynthesis in planta, PhPPY-AT expression was transiently downregulated in flowers of wild-type petunia, the PhADT1xPhPPA-AT RNAi line, and the PhADT1 and PhPPA-AT RNAi parental lines by infiltrating agrobacteria carrying the PhPPY-AT RNAi construct. Approximately 70â75% reduced expression levels of PhPPY-AT were achieved in all lines relative to their corresponding controls 2 days after infiltration (Fig. 4a). Reduced PhPPY-AT expression led to a decrease in phenylalanine levels by 13% in wild-type flowers and by 28â33% in the PhADT1xPhPPA-AT RNAi (Fig. 4a) and parental RNAi lines (Supplementary Fig. S4). Interestingly, downregulation of PhPPY-AT had a greater impact on phenylalanine-derived volatiles in the PhADT1xPhPPA-AT RNAi line compared with wild-type and the parental RNAi lines (64% versus 20â40%, respectively; Fig. 4a and Supplementary Fig. S4). Moreover, when PhPPY-AT was overexpressed in the wild-type and PhADT1xPhPPA-AT RNAi background, the levels of phenylalanine increased by 177% and 37%, respectively, and volatiles by 130% and 73%, respectively (Fig. 4b). Taken together, these results provide in vivo evidence that cytosolic PhPPY-AT is involved in phenylalanine formation.
Tyr catabolism and Phe biosynthesis are interconnected
Previously it has been shown that the transamination of prephenate to arogenate by PhPPA-AT in petunia depends exclusively on aspartate and glutamate as amino donors17. In contrast, biochemical characterization of PhPPY-AT has revealed that tyrosine is by far the most efficient amino donor (Supplementary Table S2). To verify if tyrosine participates in the transamination of phenylpyruvate in vivo, feeding experiments with 15N-tyrosine were performed with 2 day-old wild-type petunia flowers and the 15N incorporation of the labelled amino group in phenylalanine was analysed. After 6âh of continuous feeding with 10âmM 15N-tyrosine, the tyrosine pool was labelled by >87%, whereas the phenylalanine pool was labelled by 5% (Fig. 5a). All other amino acids remained unlabelled, with the exception of glutamate and aspartate, which were both labelled by <1.3% after 6âh. No labelling was retrieved in phenylalanine when ring-labelled 2H4-tyrosine was supplied instead, confirming that tyrosine is not converted to phenylalanine via dehydration. When 10âmM 15N-tyrosine was fed to flowers of the PhADT1xPhPPA-AT RNAi line, the phenylalanine pool was labelled ~52% higher than that detected in wild-type (Fig. 5a). Labelling experiments with the PhADT1 and PhPPA-AT parental RNAi lines showed 25% lower and 31% higher incorporation of 15N label into phenylalanine than wild-type, respectively (Fig. 5a).
To investigate whether the cytosolic pool of tyrosine can influence phenylalanine levels in vivo, the level of tyrosine was depleted in petunia flowers of PhADT1xPhPPA-AT RNAi via transient overexpression of the cytosolic Arabidopsis tyrosine decarboxylase (AtTYDC), which exclusively catalyses decarboxylation of L-tyrosine to tyramine37,38. AtTYDC overexpression resulted in 50% reduction of the tyrosine pool and a 9-fold increase in tyramine levels with a concomitant 50% decrease in phenylalanine levels (Fig. 5b).
Discussion
Recent investigations into aromatic amino-acid biosynthesis revealed that in contrast to most microbes, plants predominantly rely on the arogenate pathway to synthesize phenylalanine15,16,17,18. However, the results presented here demonstrate that downregulating PhPPA-AT in the PhADT1 RNAi background rescues phenylalanine and phenylalanine-derived volatile levels (Fig. 2c, Supplementary Fig. S1, and Supplementary Table S1), suggesting the redirection of carbon flux from prephenate via an alternative route and thus reopening de facto the search for plant genes participating in the microbial-like phenylpyruvate pathway (Fig. 1). In this regard, a petunia aminotransferase, PhPPY-AT, which preferentially converts phenylpyruvate to phenylalanine and is unable to utilize prephenate as substrate (Supplementary Table S3) was identified. Downregulation and overexpression of PhPPY-AT confirm the participation of PhPPY-AT in phenylalanine biosynthesis in vivo (Fig. 4 and Supplementary Fig. S4), therefore establishing the existence of a functional alternative phenylpyruvate pathway in plants. Moreover, flux through the phenylpyruvate pathway is higher when the entry point into the arogenate pathway is blocked as it occurs in PhPPA-AT and PhADT1xPhPPA-AT RNAi lines (Fig. 5a). It still remains enigmatic why phenylalanine and phenylalanine-derived volatile levels in the PhADT1xPhPPA-AT RNAi line were completely restored to those of wild-type and not just to those of the PhPPA-AT RNAi line (Fig. 2c, Supplementary Fig. S1 and Supplementary Table S1), despite identical metabolic profiles (Supplementary Fig. S1) and comparable increases in flux through the phenylpyruvate pathway (Fig. 5a). The decreased flux in the PhADT1 RNAi line (Fig. 5a) is likely due to the overall reduction in phenylalanine biosynthesis via the downregulation of the upstream shikimate pathway16 (Supplementary Fig. S1).
To date, it is believed that aromatic amino acids are exclusively synthesized in the plastid10,16,18,29,30, and then transported into the cytosol to serve as building blocks for proteins and precursors of downstream metabolites. In light of the absence of an N-terminal targeting signal and the confirmed cytosolic localization of PhPPY-AT (Fig. 3), the all-plastidial paradigm of phenylalanine biosynthesis should be shifted to now include a cytosolic component (Fig. 6). This discovery may also alter the already complex post-transcriptional regulatory model of carbon flux through the shikimate pathway, which involves feedback mechanisms controlled by phenylalanine levels in plastids10 (Fig. 6). Furthermore, it can be envisioned that this will influence future metabolic engineering strategies for manipulating production of numerous important plant products.
The demonstration that phenylpyruvate serves as an intermediate in phenylalanine biosynthesis now implicates the existence of a functional prephenate dehydratase (PDT) converting prephenate to phenylpyruvate in plants (Fig. 1). To date, PDT activity and phenylpyruvate have rarely been reported in plant tissues16,39. However, using triple quadrupole LC-MS we were able to detect PDT activity in petunia plastids and found it to be increased by approximately 2-fold in PhADT1xPhPPA-AT and parental RNAi lines (Supplementary Fig. S5a). Together with increased prephenate levels in the PhADT1xPhPPA-AT and PhPPA-AT RNAi lines (Supplementary Fig. S1), these results suggest that increased PDT activity efficiently redirects carbon flux through the alternative phenylpyruvate route, resulting in elevated phenylalanine levels compared with the PhADT1 RNAi line (Fig. 2c). Although PDT activity also increased in the PhADT1 RNAi line, it is likely that carbon flux was not redirected through the phenylpyruvate route because prephenate failed to accumulate and flux through the shikimate pathway was reduced16 (Supplementary Fig. S1). It remains to be investigated if there is a dedicated PDT with strict specificity for prephenate catalysing this reaction, or if plants rely on one or more of the known ADTs that can use prephenate as substrate at low catalytic efficiencies15,16,40. In petunia, PhADT2 and PhADT3, but not PhADT1, are capable of utilizing prephenate16. However, their expression levels did not correlate with increased PDT activity in the arogenate pathway knockdown lines (Supplementary Fig. S5b), indicating either the participation of an unknown enzyme(s) or post-transcriptional upregulation of the aforementioned ADTs. Projecting forward, it is additionally necessary to understand how phenylpyruvate is transported out of the plastid to serve as substrate for the cytosolic aminotransferase (Fig. 6).
PhPPY-AT belongs to the class of tyrosine aminotransferases (EC 2.6.1.5) that are defined to catalyse the reversible conversion of tyrosine+2-oxoglutarate to 4-hydroxyphenylpyruvate+glutamate. Although tyrosine is the preferred amino donor for PhPPY-AT (Supplementary Table S2), the unique property of this plant enzyme is that instead of 2-oxoglutarate serving as the primary keto acid acceptor, it preferentially uses phenylpyruvate (Supplementary Table S3), thus suggesting an interconnection of the catabolism of tyrosine with the production of phenylalanine in the cytosol (Fig. 6). The greater catalytic efficiency of the forward reaction (tyrosine+phenylpyruvate â 4-hydroxyphenylpyruvate+phenylalanine) over the reverse (Table 1), as well as the impacts observed on the phenylalanine pool when PhPPY-AT expression is altered (Fig. 4), further support such a relationship occurring in planta. The reduction in phenylalanine levels when the cytosolic tyrosine pool was depleted (Fig. 5b), together with the labelling retrieved in the amino group of phenylalanine from 15N-tyrosine (Fig. 5a), provide direct in vivo evidence for the interconnection between these aromatic amino acids (Fig. 6).
It is foreseeable that PPY-ATs directly interconnecting tyrosine and phenylalanine metabolism are not limited to petunia. Further examination of the melon aromatic amino-acid aminotransferase, CmArAT1 (ref. 20), revealed that similar to PhPPY-AT, it also converts phenylpyruvate to phenylalanine (Supplementary Table S4) using tyrosine as the preferred amino donor (Supplementary Table S5). In addition, we observed that similar to petunia flowers (Fig. 5a), the phenylalanine pool in 5-week-old Arabidopsis inflorescence shoots was labelled by 4.16±0.23% after feeding 10âmM 15N-tyrosine for 6âh. Moreover, a recent metabolic engineering study overexpressing PheA, a bacterial bifunctional chorismate mutase/PDT, in Arabidopsis plastids resulted in increased levels of phenylalanine and the tyrosine-derived metabolites homogentisate, tocopherols and tocotrienols19. Interestingly, homogentisate serves as the aromatic head group of the tocopherols and tocotrienols, and is synthesized in the cytosol from 4-hydroxyphenylpyruvate via tyrosine5 (Fig. 6). Although at the time the basis for the enhanced pools of tyrosine-derived metabolites in transgenic PheA Arabidopsis plants was unexplained19, in light of the current study, it is logical to suspect that increased flux from phenylpyruvate to phenylalanine drove that of tyrosine to 4-hydroxyphenylpyruvate via an aminotransferase orthologous to PhPPY-AT. Indeed, a Blastp search against Arabidopsis using PhPPY-AT as query retrieves as the best hit At5g53970, a recently characterized tyrosine aminotransferase demonstrated to be involved in tocopherol biosynthesis23.
The discovery that the microbial-like phenylpyruvate pathway does in fact operate in plants raises many questions about the control of carbon flux towards phenylalanine and its downstream metabolites. One particularly crucial aspect that now must be taken into consideration is the role of compartmentalization and transport of intermediates in regulating flux through the phenylalanine biosynthetic pathways. It would also be interesting to explore the possibility of an analogous alternative pathway occurring for tyrosine biosynthesis from 4-hydroxyphenylpyruvate that a priori would be mediated by another aminotransferase (Fig. 6). Finally, it should be emphasized that further studies are necessary to elucidate the functional relationship between the parallel pathways of phenylalanine biosynthesis, as well as that with tyrosine catabolism.
Methods
Plant materials and metabolic analysis
Petunia hybrida cv: Mitchell wild-type (Ball Seed Co., West Chicago, IL, USA) and transgenic PhADT1 RNAi, PhPPA-AT RNAi and crossed PhADT1xPhPPA-AT RNAi plants were grown under standard greenhouse conditions41 with a light period from 6:00âh to 21:00âh. Crossed lines were screened for the presence of transgenes by PCR on genomic DNA using gene-specific primers: forward 5â²-GCTAAGCTGGAGTGCACATT-3â², and reverse 5â²-ACCTGGTATGACCTTCACGA-3â² for PhPPA-AT and forward, 5â²-ATTTCGAACAAGCGTACACC-3â² and reverse 5â² AATTGTGAGCGCCTTAGGTA-3â² for PhADT1. Scent collection and targeted metabolic profiling of petunia petals were performed as described previously16, with the exception of scent collection time, which was from 18:00âh to 22:00âh.
Gene expression analysis using qRT-PCR
For RNA isolation, petals from at least eight petunia flowers were harvested at 20:00âh, 2 days after anthesis and immediately frozen in liquid nitrogen. Total RNA was isolated using an RNeasy plant mini kit (Qiagen, Valencia, CA, USA) and treated with DNase I to eliminate genomic DNA using the TURBODNA-free kit (Ambion, Foster City, CA, USA). One microgram of RNA was subsequently reverse-transcribed to cDNA in a total volume of 100âμl using the High Capacity cDNA reverse transcription kit (Applied Biosystems, Foster City, CA, USA). qRT-PCR analysis relative to the reference gene UBQ10 (ubiquitin 10) for PhADT1, PhADT2, PhADT3, PhCM1 and PhPPA-AT were performed using gene-specific primer pairs (Supplementary Table S6)16,17. Forward 5â²-GCTTCTCACAAGTTCAATGGTTATGCT-3â² and reverse 5â²-CCAGAAAGGCAATTGCAGATTATTT-3â² primers for PhPPY-AT were designed using PrimerExpress (Applied Biosystems, Foster City, CA, USA) and exhibited 93% efficiency at a final concentration of 500ânM. For absolute quantification of AtTYDC transcript levels, pCR4-TOPO vector carrying AtTYDC was digested with BamHI and EroRV and the resulting fragment was purified from agarose gel with a Qiaquick gel extraction kit (Qiagen, Valencia, CA, USA). Concentration of purified DNA fragment was determined with the NanoDrop 1000 spectrophotometer (Thermo Scientific, West Palm Beach, FL, USA). Several dilutions were prepared from 4ângâmlâ1 to 6.4âpgâmlâ1 and used to obtain standard curves in qRTâPCR with gene-specific primers (Supplementary Table S6)38. Individual qRTâPCR reactions contained 5âμl of the SYBR Green PCR master mix (Applied Biosystems, Foster City, CA, USA), 3âμl of 50-fold diluted cDNA, and 1âμl of 5âμM forward and reverse primers. Two-step qRTâPCR amplification (40 cycles of 95â°C for 3âs followed by 60â°C for 30âs) was performed using the StepOnePlus real-time PCR system (Applied Biosystems, Foster City, CA, USA). On the basis of the standard curves, absolute quantity of AtTYDC transcript was calculated and expressed as pg per 200âng total RNA. Each data point represents an average of three to five independent biological samples with three technical replicates for each sample.
Expression and purification of recombinant proteins
For functional expression, the coding region of PhPPY-AT was amplified with forward 5â²-CGCGCGGCAGCCATATGATGGAGACGAATGTGGTGAAAGTGA-3â² and reverse 5â²-GTCATGCTAGCCATATGTCAACAGTGACCATTTTGTTGATATGAATG-3â² primers designed using the In-Fusion online tool ( http://bioinfo.clontech.com/infusion/convertPcrPrimersInit.do). The amplified gene product was cloned into the NdeI site of pET28a containing an N-terminal (6xHis)-tag (Novagen, Madison, WI, USA) using In-Fusion cloning (Clonetech, Mountain View, CA, USA). For functional expression of CmArAT1 its coding region was obtained by PCR using forward 5â²-AACATATGCATCATCATCATCATCACGAGATTGGAGCTGTGAAC-3â² and reverse 5â²- GGATCCTTACAACATTAGTGTATGC-3â² primers with the pBK-CMV-CmArAT1 (ref. 20) as a template. The amplified gene product was cloned into a pET21a expression vector (Novagen, Madison, WI, USA) at the NdeI site with an N-terminal (6xHis)-tag. After sequence verification, recombinant PhPPY-AT and CmArAT1 were expressed in E. coli and purified on Ni-NTA resin (Qiagen, Valencia, CA, USA). Expression in E. coli Rosetta cells, induction, harvesting and crude extract preparation were performed as described previously42 with the exception of lysis buffer, which contained 50âmM Tris-HCl (pH 7.5), 10âμM pyridoxal 5-phosphate (PLP), 5âmM β-mercaptoethanol, 300âmM NaCl and 10% glycerol. Fractions with the highest PPY-AT activity were desalted on the Sephadex G-50 Fine column (GE Healthcare Bio-Sciences AB, Uppsala, Sweden) into the buffer containing 20âmM Tris-HCl, pH 8.0, 1âmM EDTA and 10% glycerol and PLP was then added to 100âμM. 6xHis tag from purified protein was removed by thrombin (Sigma-Aldrich, St Louis, MO, USA) before biochemical and kinetic characterization of enzyme.
Functional complementation of the E. coli mutant DL39
For functional complementation, the coding region of PhPPY-AT was obtained by PCR using forward 5â²-CCGGGGATCCTCTAGAATGGAGACGAATGTGGTGAAAGTGA-3â² and reverse 5â²-GCAGGTCGACTCTAGATCAACAGTGACCATTTTGTTGATATGAATG-3â² primers designed with the In-Fusion online tool. The amplified PhPPY-AT coding sequence was cloned into XbaI site of pBad33 (ref. 28) under control of an arabinose-inducible promoter using In-Fusion cloning and introduced into the DL39 mutant (LAM-, aspC13, fnr-25, rph-1, ilvE12, tyrB507; Coli Genetic Stock Center, Yale University, New Haven, CT, USA)27, which is auxotrophic for phenylalanine, tyrosine, aspartic acid, valine, leucine and isoleucine. Functional complementation was performed essentially as described21. Starter cultures of wild-type E. coli K-12 and DL39 cells harbouring either empty pBad33 or the pBad33-PhPPYAT construct were grown in liquid M9 minimal medium containing 0.2% arabinose and 50âμgâmlâ1 phenylalanine, tyrosine, aspartic acid, valine, leucine and isoleucine. Chloramphenicol (25âμgâmlâ1) was also added to DL39 cells for plasmid selection. After 36âh of growth at 37â°C, cells were washed two times with M9 medium without antibiotics or amino acids, and resuspended to an OD600 of 0.1, which was further used to create cell dilutions with an OD600 of 1 à 10â2, 10â3 and 10â4. Next, 5âμl of cells at each cell density were plated on M9 plates containing 0.2% arabinose and 50âμgâmlâ1 aspartic acid, valine, leucine and isoleucine, with and without 50âμgâmlâ1 phenylalanine and tyrosine. After 24âh at 37â°C, a positive functional complementation was assessed by looking for the restored ability of the DL39 mutant to grow in the absence of phenylalanine and tyrosine.
Enzyme assays
Recombinant PhPPY-AT activity was analysed in the reaction mixture (50âμl) containing 50âmM HEPES pH 10, 10âmM amino donor, 10âmM keto acid substrate and 200âμM PLP, which were preincubated at 30â°C for 5âmin. The reaction was initiated by adding 5.6âμg of protein and incubated at 30â°C for 15âmin. When Tyr was used as amino donor, 1.12âμg of protein was used and reactions were incubated for 3âmin. For reverse reactions, 13.5âμg or 2.8âμg of enzymes were used for 4-hydroxyphenylpyruvate and α-ketoglutarate substrates, respectively. After termination of reaction with 50âμl of 1N HCl and centrifugation, 20âμl of the final reaction mixture was derivatized with o-phthalaldehyde and analysed by HPLC (Agilent 1200 HPLC system, Palo Alto, CA, USA) as described17.
Plastidic PDT activity was analysed in the reaction mixtures (50âμl) containing 50âmM Na-phosphate (pH 8.0) and 3âmM prephenate, which were preincubated at 37â°C for 5âmin. The reaction was initiated by adding 100âμg of plastidic protein and incubated at 37â°C for 60âmin. The reaction was terminated by 50âμl of 100% MeOH. After protein precipitation, 10âμl of the final mixture was subjected to Triple Quadrupole LC-MS (Agilent 6460, Palo Alto, CA, USA). Chromatographic separation was performed using an Agilent 1200 LC system (Palo Alto, CA, USA) equipped with Atlantis dC18 column (3âμm, 150 à 2.1âmm; Waters, Milford, MA, USA) with a 20âmin linear gradient of 0â95% acetonitrile in 1% formic acid. Phenylpyruvate was monitored in MRM (multiple reaction monitoring) mode and quantified based on a standard calibration curve generated with an authentic phenylpyruvate standard. The d0-phenylpyruvate data were acquired by monitoring the following transitions: 163.1â116.9 with a collision energy of 25âV, 163.1â100.9 with a collision energy of 25âV, and 163.1â91 with a collision energy of 5âV. The d1-prephenate data were acquired by monitoring the following transitions: 225â121 with a collision energy of 20âV, 225â109.1 with a collision energy of 10âV and 225â91.1 with a collision energy of 5âV. The dwell time for all data acquired was 50âms and fragmentor voltage was 70âV. The jet stream ESI interface had a gas temperature of 325â°C, gas flow rate of 8âlâminâ1, nebulizer pressure of 35 psi, sheath gas temperature of 250â°C, sheath gas flow rate of 7âlâminâ1, capillary voltage of 3,000âV and nozzle voltage of 500âV.
All enzyme assays were performed at an appropriate enzyme concentration so that reaction velocity was linear and proportional to enzyme concentration during the incubation time period. Kinetic data were evaluated by hyperbolic regression analysis (HYPER.EXE, Version 1.00, 1992). At least triplicate assays were performed for all data points.
Preparation of plastidial and cytosolic fractions
Plastids were isolated from 10 to 20âg of petals of 1â3 days old petunia flowers as described43. Petals were cut into small pieces, vacuum infiltrated twice for 3âmin with chilled homogenizing buffer containing 0.5âM sorbitol, 20âmM HEPES/NaOH (pH 7.4), 10âmM KCl, 1âmM MgCl2.6H2O, 1âmM EDTA-Na2, 5âmM DTT, and 1% BSA and blended three times for 5âs in 200âml of buffer. The homogenate was filtered through two layers of Miracloth (Calbiochem, La Jolla, CA, USA) and centrifuged at 2,500 Ã g for 5âmin. The pellet was twice washed with 2âml of 0.5âM sorbitol and 20âmM HEPES (pH 7.4), plastids were than resuspended in buffer containing 50âmM sodium phosphate buffer and 10% glycerol and used for enzyme assays. To prepare a cytosolic fraction, the remaining supernatant was centrifuged for an additional 20âmin at 12,000 Ã g at 4C to pellet mitochondria and peroxisomes. The resulting supernatant (cytosolic fraction) was then concentrated and desalted into 50âmM sodium phosphate buffer and 10% glycerol using an Ultrafree-MC filter (Ultra-4; Millipore Amicon, Billerica, MA, USA ) before enzyme assays.
Subcellular localization of PPY-AT
Plasmid p326-sGFP containing the cauliflower mosaic virus 35S promoter was used for the generation of GFP fusion constructs. For the C-terminal GFP fusion (PhPPY-AT-GFP), the open reading frame of PhPPY-AT was amplified using forward primer 5â²-GTCTAGAATGGAGACGAATGTGGTGAAAGTGA-3â², which introduced an XbaI site (underlined) upstream of ATG codon, and reverse primer 5â²-CGGATCCACAGTGTGACCATTTTGTTGATATGAA-3â² containing a BamHI site (underlined). For the N-terminal GFP fusion (GFP-PhPPY-AT), the PhPPY-AT open reading frame was amplified by PCR using forward primer 5â²-CTGTACAAGATGGAGACGAATGTGGTGAAAGTGA-3â², which introduced a BsrGI site (underlined) at the initiating ATG codon, in combination with reverse primer 5â²-GGCGGCCGCTCAACAGTGACCATTTTGTTGATAT-3â², introducing a NotI site (underlined) after the stop codon. The PCR fragments were subcloned into the pGEM-T vector (Invitrogen, Carlsbad, CA, USA) and checked by sequencing for absence of errors during PCR amplifications. The XbaI-BamHI and BsrGI-NotI fragments were subcloned into the p326-sGFP vector in frame with GFP. Arabidopsis protoplasts were prepared and transformed as described previously44. The plasmids p326-sGFP and p326-RbTP-sGFP containing a plastidial Rubisco target peptide, were used as markers for cytosolic and plastidial localization, respectively. Transient expression of GFP fusion proteins was observed 16â20âh after transformation, and images were acquired using Zeiss LSM710 laser spectral scanning confocal microscope with a C-Apochromat 40 Ã /1.20âW objective (Zeiss, Thornwood, NY, USA). GFP was excited with an Argon laser at wavelength 488ânm and emissions were collected over a 493â598ânm bandpass. Chlorophyll fluorescence was excited by a HeNe laser at wavelength 633ânm and emissions were collected over a 647â721ânm bandpass.
PhPPY-AT downregulation and overexpression in planta
For the PhPPY-AT RNAi construct a synthetic DNA, containing two spliced PhPPY-AT cDNA fragments of the coding region corresponding to nucleotides 363â891 and 363â687, the latter in antisence orientation to form a hairpin structure, was synthesized (Genscript, Piscataway, NJ, USA). EcoRI and BamHI sites were introduced at the 5â² and 3â² ends during DNA synthesis and the resulting synthetic DNA fragment was subcloned into the EcoRI/BamHI site of pRNA69 vector containing LIS promoter41. Next, the part of constructed plasmid containing the LIS promoter and the two PPY-AT fragments in opposite orientation separated by the intron was cut out using SacI/NotI and subcloned into the pART27 simpler binary vector45. Transient PhPPY-AT downregulation was achieved using vacuum infiltration of at least 15 total 1-day-old petunia flowers from five different plants with Agrobacterium tumefaciens strain GV3101 containing pART27-LIS-PPY-AT RNAi and pART27-LIS vector (control) at OD600 of 0.4 as described previously. Forty-eight hours after infiltration, scent was collected for 4âh from 18:00âh to 22:00âh and analysed by GC-MS16. For PhPPY-AT overexpression, the open reading frame of PhPPY-AT was amplified by PCR using forward 5â²-CACCATGGAGACGAATGTGGTGAAAGTGA-3â² and reverse 5â²-TCAACAGTGACCATTTTGTTGATATGAATG-3â² primers. The PCR fragment was subcloned into the pENTR/D-TOPO vector (Invitrogen, Carlsbad, CA, USA) and verified by sequencing for absence of errors during PCR amplifications. The Gataway cloning strategy was employed to subclone the PhPPYAT fragment into the destination vector pB2GW7 (Invitrogen, Carlsbad, CA, USA). Transient PhPPY-AT overexpression was performed as described previously46.
AtTYDC overexpression in petunia flowers
The Arabidopsis TYDC coding region was PCR-amplified using forward primer 5â²-CCATGGATGGAATTTGGTACCGGCAACG-3â² and reverse primer 5â²-TCCAAATTTACACGCAACGACCATTATTAACTGCAG-3â² and subcloned into the pGEMT easy vector (Invitrogen, Carlsbad, CA, USA). After sequence verification, the fragment was subcloned into the NcoI/PstI site of the pEF1-LIS binary vector47 and transient AtTYDC overexpression was performed as described above.
Labelling experiments
Feeding experiments were performed as described previously25. Corollas from 2-day-old wild-type and transgenic petunia flowers were fed with 10âmM 15N-Tyr,L-[ring-2H4]-Tyr (Cambridge Isotope Laboratories, Andover, MA, USA), or L-[ring-2H5]-Phenylpyruvate. L-[ring-2H5]-Phenylpyruvate was synthesized by enzymatic conversion of L-[ring-2H5]-Phe (Cambridge Isotope Laboratories, Andover, MA, USA) by melon CmArAT1 with a keto substrate α-ketoglutarate, and cofactor PLP. After filtration through an Ultrafree-MC filter and Dowex 50-H+ à 8, 200 mesh column (Sigma-Aldrich, St Louis, MO, USA) to exclude proteins and amino acids, respectively, the purity of synthesized phenylpyruvate was analysed by TOF LC-MS and Triple Quadrupole LC-MS to ensure no contamination by labelled phenylalanine. Synthesized phenylpyruvate was 99.8% pure (Supplementary Fig. S6) and used for feeding experiments. Tissues were collected after 2, 4 and 6âh for tyrosine, and after 6âh for phenylpyruvate, feeding starting at 18:00âh, followed by complete amino acid analysis as described previously16. The percentage of amino acid labelling was determined as the sum of the intensities of the shifted molecular ions divided by the sum of intensities for unshifted and shifted molecular ions, after correcting for natural isotope abundance.
Additional information
Accession code: PPY-AT sequence has been deposited in the NCBI Genbank nucleotide database under accession code KF511589.
How to cite this article: Yoo, H. et al. An alternative pathway contributes to phenylalanine biosynthesis in plants via a cytosolic tyrosine:phenylpyruvate aminotransferase. Nat. Commun. 4:2833 doi: 10.1038/ncomms3833 (2013).
Accession codes
References
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Acknowledgements
We thank Jyotishka Datta and Dr Bruce Craig from the Purdue Statistical Consulting Service (SCS â http://www.stat.purdue.edu/scs/) for consultations on statistic analysis of results. This research was supported by National Research Initiative Competitive Grant 2005-35318-16207 from the USDA Cooperative State Research, Education and Extension Service to N.D. and D.R., by the Office of Science (BER), U.S. Department of Energy (DE-SC0008628), by grant from the National Science Foundation MCB-0919987 to N.D., and in part by the Gordon and Betty Moore Foundation through Grant GBMF 2550.02 to the Life Sciences Research Foundation in support of J.R.W.
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H.J., J.R.W., D.R. and N.D. designed research. H.J. performed metabolic analysis, enzyme assays, subcellular fractionation of petunia petal crude extracts, analysis of PPY-AT RNAi downregulation and AtTYDC overexpression and 15N-tyrosine labelling experiments; J.R.W. identified PPY-AT and performed functional complementation; Y.Q. performed PPY-AT and CmArAT1 biochemical characterization and PPY-AT subcellular localization; H.M. generated transgenic of PhADT1xPPA-AT RNAi lines; I.G. and E.L. generated CmArAT1 protein expression construct; B.R.C. and A.S.J. were responsible for triple quadrupole LC-MS; H.J., J.R.W., D.R., and N.D. Analysed data and wrote the paper. All authors read and edited the manuscript.
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Yoo, H., Widhalm, J., Qian, Y. et al. An alternative pathway contributes to phenylalanine biosynthesis in plants via a cytosolic tyrosine:phenylpyruvate aminotransferase. Nat Commun 4, 2833 (2013). https://doi.org/10.1038/ncomms3833
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1038/ncomms3833