8 results on '"Sattely E"'
Search Results
2. A developmental gradient reveals biosynthetic pathways to eukaryotic toxins in monocot geophytes.
- Author
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Mehta N, Meng Y, Zare R, Kamenetsky-Goldstein R, and Sattely E
- Subjects
- Alkaloids biosynthesis, Alkaloids metabolism, Plant Leaves metabolism, Amaryllidaceae metabolism, Amaryllidaceae genetics, Toxins, Biological metabolism, Toxins, Biological biosynthesis, Biosynthetic Pathways
- Abstract
Numerous eukaryotic toxins that accumulate in geophytic plants are valuable in the clinic, yet their biosynthetic pathways have remained elusive. A notable example is the >150 Amaryllidaceae alkaloids (AmAs), including galantamine, an FDA-approved treatment for Alzheimer's disease. We show that while AmAs accumulate to high levels in many daffodil tissues, biosynthesis is localized to nascent, growing tissue at the leaf base. A similar trend is found in the production of steroidal alkaloids (e.g., cyclopamine) in corn lily. This model of active biosynthesis enabled the elucidation of a complete set of biosynthetic genes that can be used to produce AmAs. Taken together, our work sheds light on the developmental and enzymatic logic of diverse alkaloid biosynthesis in daffodils. More broadly, it suggests a paradigm for biosynthesis regulation in monocot geophytes, where plants are protected from herbivory through active charging of newly formed cells with eukaryotic toxins that persist as above-ground tissue develops., Competing Interests: Declaration of interests The authors declare no competing interests., (Copyright © 2024 The Author(s). Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. A developmental gradient reveals biosynthetic pathways to eukaryotic toxins in monocot geophytes.
- Author
-
Mehta N, Meng Y, Zare R, Kamenetsky-Goldstein R, and Sattely E
- Abstract
Numerous eukaryotic toxins that accumulate in geophytic plants are valuable in the clinic, yet their biosynthetic pathways have remained elusive. A lead example is the >150 Amaryllidaceae alkaloids (AmAs) including galantamine, an FDA-approved treatment for Alzheimer's disease. We show that while AmAs accumulate to high levels in many tissues in daffodils, biosynthesis is localized to nascent, growing tissue at the base of leaves. A similar trend is found for the production of steroidal alkaloids (e.g. cyclopamine) in corn lily. This model of active biosynthesis enabled elucidation of a complete set of biosynthetic genes for the production of AmAs. Taken together, our work sheds light on the developmental and enzymatic logic of diverse alkaloid biosynthesis in daffodil. More broadly, it suggests a paradigm for biosynthesis regulation in monocot geophytes where plants are protected from herbivory through active charging of newly formed cells with eukaryotic toxins that persist as aboveground tissue develops., Competing Interests: Declaration of Interests The authors declare no competing interests.
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
4. Improved Stability of Engineered Ammonia Production in the Plant-Symbiont Azospirillum brasilense .
- Author
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Schnabel T and Sattely E
- Subjects
- Glutamate-Ammonia Ligase metabolism, Nitrogen metabolism, Nitrogen Fixation physiology, Plant Roots metabolism, Plant Roots microbiology, Soil, Zea mays metabolism, Zea mays microbiology, Ammonia metabolism, Azospirillum brasilense physiology, Plants metabolism, Plants microbiology, Symbiosis physiology
- Abstract
Bioavailable nitrogen is the limiting nutrient for most agricultural food production. Associative diazotrophs can colonize crop roots and fix their own bioavailable nitrogen from the atmosphere. Wild-type (WT) associative diazotrophs, however, do not release fixed nitrogen in culture and are not known to directly transfer fixed nitrogen resources to plants. Efforts to engineer diazotrophs for plant nitrogen provision as an alternative to chemical fertilization have yielded several strains that transiently release ammonia. However, these strains suffer from selection pressure for nonproducers, which rapidly deplete ammonia accumulating in culture, likely limiting their potential for plant growth promotion (PGP). Here we report engineered Azospirillum brasilense strains with significantly extend ammonia production lifetimes of up to 32 days in culture. Our approach relies on multicopy genetic redundancy of a unidirectional adenylyltransferase (uAT) as a posttranslational mechanism to induce ammonia release via glutamine synthetase deactivation. Testing our multicopy stable strains with the model monocot Setaria viridis in hydroponic monoassociation reveals improvement in plant growth promotion compared to single copy strains. In contrast, inoculation of Zea mays in nitrogen-poor, nonsterile soil does not lead to increased PGP relative to WT, suggesting strain health, resource competition, or colonization capacity in soil may also be limiting factors. In this context, we show that while engineered strains fix more nitrogen per cell compared to WT strains, the expression strength of multiple uAT copies needs to be carefully balanced to maximize ammonia production rates and avoid excessive fitness defects caused by excessive glutamine synthetase shutdown.
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
5. Engineering Posttranslational Regulation of Glutamine Synthetase for Controllable Ammonia Production in the Plant Symbiont Azospirillum brasilense.
- Author
-
Schnabel T and Sattely E
- Subjects
- Azospirillum brasilense genetics, Azospirillum brasilense growth & development, Pheophytins metabolism, Protein Processing, Post-Translational, Setaria Plant growth & development, Symbiosis, Ammonia metabolism, Azospirillum brasilense metabolism, Glutamate-Ammonia Ligase metabolism, Setaria Plant microbiology
- Abstract
Nitrogen requirements for modern agriculture far exceed the levels of bioavailable nitrogen in most arable soils. As a result, the addition of nitrogen fertilizer is necessary to sustain productivity and yields, especially for cereal crops, the planet's major calorie suppliers. Given the unsustainability of industrial fertilizer production and application, engineering biological nitrogen fixation directly at the roots of plants has been a grand challenge for biotechnology. Here, we designed and tested a potentially broadly applicable metabolic engineering strategy for the overproduction of ammonia in the diazotrophic symbiont Azospirillum brasilense. Our approach is based on an engineered unidirectional adenylyltransferase (uAT) that posttranslationally modifies and deactivates glutamine synthetase (GS), a key regulator of nitrogen metabolism in the cell. We show that this circuit can be controlled inducibly, and we leveraged the inherent self-contained nature of our posttranslational approach to demonstrate that multicopy redundancy can improve strain evolutionary stability. uAT-engineered Azospirillum is capable of producing ammonia at rates of up to 500 μM h
-1 unit of OD600 (optical density at 600 nm)-1 . We demonstrated that when grown in coculture with the model monocot Setaria viridis, these strains increase the biomass and chlorophyll content of plants up to 54% and 71%, respectively, relative to the wild type (WT). Furthermore, we rigorously demonstrated direct transfer of atmospheric nitrogen to extracellular ammonia and then plant biomass using isotopic labeling: after 14 days of cocultivation with engineered uAT strains, 9% of chlorophyll nitrogen in Setaria seedlings was derived from diazotrophically fixed dinitrogen, whereas no nitrogen was incorporated in plants cocultivated with WT controls. This rational design for tunable ammonia overproduction is modular and flexible, and we envision that it could be deployable in a consortium of nitrogen-fixing symbiotic diazotrophs for plant fertilization. IMPORTANCE Nitrogen is the most limiting nutrient in modern agriculture. Free-living diazotrophs, such as Azospirillum , are common colonizers of cereal grasses and have the ability to fix nitrogen but natively do not release excess ammonia. Here, we used a rational engineering approach to generate ammonia-excreting strains of Azospirillum . Our design features posttranslational control of highly conserved central metabolism, enabling tunability and flexibility of circuit placement. We found that our strains promote the growth and health of the model grass S. viridis and rigorously demonstrated that in comparison to WT controls, our engineered strains can transfer nitrogen from15 N2 gas to plant biomass. Unlike previously reported ammonia-producing mutants, our rationally designed approach easily lends itself to further engineering opportunities and has the potential to be broadly deployable.- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
6. A Pathogen-Responsive Gene Cluster for Highly Modified Fatty Acids in Tomato.
- Author
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Jeon JE, Kim JG, Fischer CR, Mehta N, Dufour-Schroif C, Wemmer K, Mudgett MB, and Sattely E
- Subjects
- Disease Resistance genetics, Diynes chemistry, Fatty Acids metabolism, Fatty Alcohols chemistry, Gene Expression Regulation, Plant genetics, Metabolomics, Multigene Family genetics, Plant Diseases microbiology, Plant Leaves metabolism, Plant Proteins metabolism, Plants, Genetically Modified, Stress, Physiological genetics, Diynes metabolism, Fatty Acids biosynthesis, Fatty Alcohols metabolism, Solanum lycopersicum genetics
- Abstract
In response to biotic stress, plants produce suites of highly modified fatty acids that bear unusual chemical functionalities. Despite their chemical complexity and proposed roles in pathogen defense, little is known about the biosynthesis of decorated fatty acids in plants. Falcarindiol is a prototypical acetylenic lipid present in carrot, tomato, and celery that inhibits growth of fungi and human cancer cell lines. Using a combination of untargeted metabolomics and RNA sequencing, we discovered a biosynthetic gene cluster in tomato (Solanum lycopersicum) required for falcarindiol production. By reconstituting initial biosynthetic steps in a heterologous host and generating transgenic pathway mutants in tomato, we demonstrate a direct role of the cluster in falcarindiol biosynthesis and resistance to fungal and bacterial pathogens in tomato leaves. This work reveals a mechanism by which plants sculpt their lipid pool in response to pathogens and provides critical insight into the complex biochemistry of alkynyl lipid production., (Copyright © 2019 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
7. HEx: A heterologous expression platform for the discovery of fungal natural products.
- Author
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Harvey CJB, Tang M, Schlecht U, Horecka J, Fischer CR, Lin HC, Li J, Naughton B, Cherry J, Miranda M, Li YF, Chu AM, Hennessy JR, Vandova GA, Inglis D, Aiyar RS, Steinmetz LM, Davis RW, Medema MH, Sattely E, Khosla C, St Onge RP, Tang Y, and Hillenmeyer ME
- Subjects
- Biosynthetic Pathways, Fermentation, High-Throughput Screening Assays, Promoter Regions, Genetic, Workflow, Biological Products metabolism, Fungi genetics, Fungi metabolism, Gene Expression, Genetic Engineering methods
- Abstract
For decades, fungi have been a source of U.S. Food and Drug Administration-approved natural products such as penicillin, cyclosporine, and the statins. Recent breakthroughs in DNA sequencing suggest that millions of fungal species exist on Earth, with each genome encoding pathways capable of generating as many as dozens of natural products. However, the majority of encoded molecules are difficult or impossible to access because the organisms are uncultivable or the genes are transcriptionally silent. To overcome this bottleneck in natural product discovery, we developed the HEx (Heterologous EXpression) synthetic biology platform for rapid, scalable expression of fungal biosynthetic genes and their encoded metabolites in Saccharomyces cerevisiae . We applied this platform to 41 fungal biosynthetic gene clusters from diverse fungal species from around the world, 22 of which produced detectable compounds. These included novel compounds with unexpected biosynthetic origins, particularly from poorly studied species. This result establishes the HEx platform for rapid discovery of natural products from any fungal species, even those that are uncultivable, and opens the door to discovery of the next generation of natural products.
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
8. Catalytic asymmetric ring-opening metathesis/cross metathesis (AROM/CM) reactions. Mechanism and application to enantioselective synthesis of functionalized cyclopentanes.
- Author
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La DS, Sattely ES, Ford JG, Schrock RR, and Hoveyda AH
- Subjects
- Alkenes chemistry, Catalysis, Cyclopentanes isolation & purification, Ethers chemistry, Models, Chemical, Norbornanes chemistry, Stereoisomerism, Styrenes chemistry, Cyclopentanes chemical synthesis
- Abstract
Studies regarding the first examples of catalytic asymmetric ring-opening metathesis (AROM) reactions are detailed. This enantioselective cleavage of norbornyl alkenes is followed by an intermolecular cross metathesis with a terminal olefin partner; judicious selection of olefin is required so that oligomerization and dimerization side products are avoided. Results outlined herein suggest that the presence of suitably positioned heteroatom substituents may be critical to reaction efficiency. Mo-catalyzed tandem AROM/CM affords functionalized cyclopentyl dienes in >98% ee and >98% trans olefin selectivity; both secondary and tertiary ether products can be obtained. The examples provided include the catalytic synthesis of an optically pure cyclopentyl epoxide and dimethyl acetal. Mechanistic studies suggest that it is the more substituted benzylidene or silylated alkylidenes that are involved in the catalytic process (vs the corresponding Mo-methylidenes). Although electron rich benzylidenes react more efficiently, the derived electron poor Mo complexes promote AROM/CM transformations as well; alkylidenes that bear a boron substituent are unreactive.
- Published
- 2001
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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